Elizabeth: The Golden Age Bottom Line: Once more Shekhar Kapur and Co. find
fun and romance in 16th century English history. By Kirk Honeycutt

Sep 9, 2007

Cate Blanchett returns as Queen Elizabeth

*Toronto International Film Festival*

TORONTO -- Queen Bess is back in fine form in "Elizabeth: The Golden Age,"
the second of a potential three-part historical romance about England's
Virgin Queen. Cate Blanchett has lost none of the brio that earned her an
Oscar nom for 1998's "Elizabeth." Nor has returning director Shekhar Kapur
toned down any of the energetic camera moves, pageantry or vivid colors he
deployed to reformulate historical drama in the original movie. This is
history writ large, presented in terms of larger-than-life personalities
rather than changing political, social and religious climates. It's robust
historical fiction, designed as movie spectacle, which calls out to toss
aside dusty history books and join the fun.

Remnants remain from Hollywood's own golden age of historical drama. A
musical score by Craig Armstrong and AR Rahman is virtually a character
itself, huffing and puffing through nearly every scene, provoking tension
and calling characters to action. Resplendent costumes, grand sets build in
England's Shepperton Studios and architecturally magnificent locations all
give a feeling of majesty. So the second "Elizabeth" movie should appeal to
a broad age range, as did its predecessor. This unabashedly romantic epic
from Working Title and Universal looks set to deliver boxoffice gold.

The good queen is now in her third decade of rule. No longer a young girl
struggling to learn the ruthless ways of court life, Elizabeth is thoroughly
at home with flattering wooers, fawning sycophants and courtly spectacle.
(Indeed, with Kapur at the helm, her court looks like a circus with exotic
humans, wild animals and nimble dancers vying for her pleasure.)

Storm clouds gather across the English Channel in Spain where King Philip II
(Jordi Molla) assembles his Catholic forces to free England from its
Protestant queen. This marks the filmmakers' attempt to contemporize 16th
century European conflicts in a model resembling our modern struggle with
religious fundamentalism. Elizabeth is seen here as the leader of the forces
of enlightenment and liberality -- which is not entirely inaccurate --
against the religious intolerance and barbarism of the Spanish Inquisition.

In Michael Hirst (who wrote the first movie) and William Nicholson's
screenplay, Elizabeth is a woman of action and sharp words rather than the
historical Elizabeth, a notorious ditherer -- who nevertheless was a shrewd
politician and social engineer -- and a ruler whose motto was "I see and
keep silent."

Her circle of advisors has been reduced to one, the great spymaster Sir
Francis Walsingham (a returning Geoffrey Rush). Her romantic interest falls
on a person who was indeed a favorite courtier yet one historical gossip
usually omits from her list of alleged lovers, the dashing explorer and
author Sir Walter Raleigh (Clive Owen).

The writers have moved up Raleigh's clandestine affair and marriage to
lady-in-waiting Bess Throkmorton (Abbie Cornish) by several years so it can
coincide with the legendary English defeat of the Spanish Armada. Raleigh
plays a huge (and historically unlikely) role in this version of that battle
but one that fits in well with the escalating drama of the Queen's personal
and public crises.

That naval battle, recreated through all manner of movie trickery from
digital effects to underwater action, is wonderfully staged and not too
elaborate. (End credits even mention the use of footage from David Lean's
"Ryan's Daughter," possibly those mighty waves crashing on a dark, rocky
shore.) Blanchett in her glistening body armor astride a fine stallion
overlooking the sea, delivering a great rally speech to the troops, gives
the movie its most resplendent moment of sheer majesty.

Yet whether in her bath or glaring at underlings, Blanchett has made this
Queen her own, a woman of fierce independence and thought, who only in her
most private moments yearns for the male touch that she must deny herself.
For virginity is part of her statecraft.

Rush is wily and self-contained as the spymaster while Owen as Sir Walter
channels a toned down yet still quite debonair Errol Flynn. Cornish comes
off a little too sweet and reserved for the rebellious Bess. The film never
finds a way to fully utilize Samantha Morton as the ill-fated Mary, Queen of
Scots, and fudges Walsingham's own possible role in Mary's "treason."

All in all, it's a grand package of hearty acting, design and action with
the only caveat being that unlike the first film this "Elizabeth" can no
longer surprise us with its modern twists.


ELIZABETH: THE GOLDEN AGE
Universal Pictures
Working Title Films

Director: Shekhar Kapur
Writers: Michael Hirst, William Nicholson
Producers: Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner, Jonathan Cavendish
Executive producers: Debra Haywood, Liza Chasin, Michael Hirst
Director of photography: Remi Adefarasin
Production designer: Guy Hendrix Dyas
Costume designer: Alexandra Byrne
Music: Craig Armstrong, AR Rahman
Editor: Jill

Cast:
Elizabeth: Clate Blanchett
Sir Francis Walsingham: Geoffrey Rush
Sir Walter Raleigh: Clive Owen
Bess Throkmorton: Abbie Cornish
Mary: Samantha Morton
Robert Reston: Rhyr Ifans
King Philip II: Jordi Molla

MPAA rating PG-13, running time 115 minutes

http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/awards_festivals/fest_reviews/article_display.jsp?rid=9779

Reply via email to