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Last year it was ethnicity that dominated
the Oscars and this year it could well be longevity. I recently
predicted that, at the age of 91, Harry Dean Stanton could be Oscar's
oldest ever Best Actor and even now there is every chance he will be
posthumously nominated while Dame Judi, a mere 82, should have no
worries in being a sure-fire contender for her performance as Queen
Victoria in "Victoria & Abdul". It's a part she has already played
in "Mrs. Brown", (losing out to Helen Hunt in "It's As Good as it
Gets"), and to be fair, this is something of a walk in the park for her.
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We
are told the movie is 'mostly' based on actual events but I think we
have to take a lot of what we see with a pinch of salt. It's certainly
an entertaining picture, if a little twee and whimsical at times, but
there is also a little more heft to it than meets the eye. As written by
Lee Hall and directed by Stephen Frears this is no mere sentimental,
historical romp. It is, of course, the story of the Queen's friendship,
in the years before her death, with her Indian servant Abdul Karim, (Ali
Fazal, an actor new to me), which until recently was something kept
very much under wraps and which was very much opposed to by the Prime
Minister, her son the Prince of Wales and the entire royal household and
Hall makes this another post-Brexit movie, (I have a feeling we are
going to see a lot of post-Brexit movies in the next few years).
What
we have here is a film about racism and about empire and it's quite as
relevant today as it was back in Victoria's time. Not that you have to
take it too seriously; there's a lot of low comedy on display and Frears
has assembled an outstanding cast of British character actors. Eddie
Izzard is an obnoxious future king, the late Tim Piggot-Smith is quite
wonderful as the toadying head of the household, Michael Gambon is the
befuddled Prime Minister and Paul Higgins practically walks off with the
picture as the Queen's concerned doctor; concerned, not with her
health, but with the number of Indians about the place. As a piece of
film-making there is, naturally, a large dose of Masterpiece Theatre on
display but that, in itself, isn't such a bad thing. "Victoria &
Abdul" goes down a treat.
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