[Film Review] Victoria & Abdul (2017) 6.3/10

Fredrick 2022-03-17 09:01:10

Taking a revisionist tone of ridiculing British monarchy's inner circle, riddled with ingrained racism, snobbish abomination and unrelieved hostility towards Abdul Karim (Fazal), the Indian munshi (native language teacher) of Queen Victoria (Dench) and her confident,yet also repeatedly showing Abdul's blind subservience (kissing the Queen's foot) to appease the backlash of colonialism, Stephen Frears' period drama VICTORIA & ABDUL seems to enmesh itself within a mean-spirited conundrum, where should we put the toehold of our sympathy? Victoria or Abdul? Either , perhaps.

Exactly two decades after John Madden's MRS. BROWN (1997), Dame Judi Dench reprises the role which has kick-started her unprecedented and unparalleled silver-screen surge when she was mere a sexagenarian, it would only be too perfect for the film to scoop her a second Oscar which she truly deserves (so that she can finally be abreast with another Dame Ms. Smith in terms of Oscar glory). Her performance here is both as one expects, stately, lucid-minded and poignantly heads-turning, but there is also something quite unexpected, the loneliness, world-weary pathos of a senile monarch, who doesn't have one single ally in her regal domicile and perennially encircled by lackeys, fussbudgets and a son hot to trot of her throne, which makes an accountable excuse for her last petulance.

Frears makes sure it is Dench's star vehicle first and foremost, dutifully hits every rung of character arc to flesh out a ruler's physical atrophy, mental slackness (her ignorance of Indian Mutiny is appalling for her position), dignified resilience and heartfelt elation all cloistered in the immurement concomitant with power, duty and all those exterior glamorous trimmings. The “I'm anything but insane” reprimand segment could be her Oscar-clip but she must fight tooth and nail to get that nomination in the cutting-throat Oscar race, especially her chance is significantly undercut by the film's below-par status as a serious awards contender.

Another defective factor is the characterization of Abdul, which abhorrently pales in comparison as if he is just a piece of exotica, good-looking enough to catch Queen's weary eyes, to say nothing of the thinly-veiled racism through the gonorrhea placement, which is as horrid the one-noted attribute of the repugnant household. Woe betide those who fail to live up to Dench's first-class craft, including the screenwriter Lee Hall and the journeyman Stephen Frears, the unwitting saboteurs of an 84-year-older's tailor- made crowning piece.

referential points: John Madden's MRS. BROWM (1997, 6.4/10); Frears' PHILOMENA (2013, 8.6/10), FLORENCE FOSTER JENKINS (2016, 7.5/10).

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Extended Reading
  • Mable 2022-03-10 08:01:26

    An unsuccessful running account biopic about a private life of Queen Victoria in her later years that was only revealed in 2010. I didn't say much about the acting skills, but it really lacked bright spots and not enough to catch people. The overall feeling is similar to Wu Zetian taking care of the Zhang brothers in his later years, and Victoria and Wu Zetian were both 81 and 22 years old at that time, and the end of the male pet was also very pitiful.

  • Palma 2022-03-23 09:03:26

    Grandma Judi performed Kerry in the audience, and the costume design was amazing. As a comedy, it was a qualified work. All the members of the royal family who play "villains" are ridiculously cute and pitiful... Considering the various real tragedies that have occurred in recent years, the Muslim Indian male servants who are the point of drama conflict sometimes feel a little chilling, leaving politics and reality aside interference, this is just a story of simple bipolar loneliness.

Victoria & Abdul quotes

  • Queen Victoria: I am cantankerous, greedy, fat, I am perhaps disagreeably attached to power, but I am anything but insane!

  • Sir Henry Ponsonby: Breakfast with the Royal Princes of Belgium. 11:00, an audience with the Sultan of Dubai, where Her Majesty will be presented with the Diamond of Oojay. Garden party where Her Majesty will receive Oscar II, King of Sweden and Norway, again, and Queen Liliuokalani.

    Queen Victoria: Who on Earth is she?

    Sir Henry Ponsonby: A monarch and, uh, sole Queen Regnant of the Kingdom of Hawaii, Your Majesty. Uh, she has composed a song for you on the ukulele. Uh, but we have managed to put her off. Then you will eat with the Prime Minister and at 7:00, the banquet in the state dining room.

    Dr. Reid: And your movements, Your Majesty?

    Queen Victoria: Nothing to speak of, Dr. Reid.

    Dr. Reid: Not even during the day?

    Queen Victoria: We last moved on Sunday evening.

    Dr. Reid: I fear the celebratory dinners are taking their toll, Your Majesty. Might I suggest some Benger's mixture?

    Queen Victoria: I refuse to eat Benger's. It's baby food.

    Dr. Reid: But it is imperative, Your Majesty, that the Royal Colon receives a little roughage.

    Queen Victoria: Anything else?

    Sir Henry Ponsonby: Um, now, was Your Majesty pleased with the mohur?

    Queen Victoria: What?

    Sir Henry Ponsonby: With the mohur, the ceremonial coin. Uh, presented by the two Indian servants.

    Queen Victoria: I thought the tall one was terribly handsome.