Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Romanoffs gets negative review from descendent

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ALEX MARSHALL

The Romanoffs, Amazon’s new drama series in which characters are descendant­s of Russia’s royal family, has not received the best reviews.

“What’s most frustratin­g about The Romanoffs is that there was clearly the potential for a decent show here, if it could have shed a few pounds of blubber and been given a stern talking to,” Rebecca Nicholson wrote in The Guardian.

James Poniewozik, in The New York Times, called it a “series of ornate but ponderous creations, a shelf-busting set of Faberge ostrich eggs.”

But one of the harshest reviews has come from an unlikely source: the Romanovs themselves (the name can be spelled both ways). Well, from at least one member of the House of Romanov: the self-declared Grand Duchess Maria of Russia.

The duchess is a resident of Spain who claims to be the rightful heir to the crown that disappeare­d from Russia during the Bolshevik Revolution. She is a greatgreat-granddaugh­ter of Czar

Alexander II, who was assassinat­ed in 1881 and was a relative of Nicholas II, the czar who was killed, along with his wife and five children, by the Bolsheviks in 1918.

The duchess’s chanceller­y (that is, her office) recently issued a news release on the show.

“The Chanceller­y of Her Imperial Highness concurs with the general consensus of the critics,” it says. It then quotes the Rotten Tomatoes website’s summary of reviews, saying the show is “fatally indulgent, asking for the utmost patience from audiences without a compelling incentive.”

The Romanoffs is a drama in which each movie-length episode centers on characters who are meant to be descendant­s of Russian royalty but are living today, such as an elderly woman in Paris struggling to cope with a Muslim caregiver, and an American man experienci­ng marital problems.

The chanceller­y’s news release said that descendant­s of the Russian crown have a “fascinatin­g history” ripe for television. But the release said that Matthew Weiner, the creator of Mad Men and The Romanoffs, had squandered the chance to present that history. Instead, the release said, Weiner has made “a series of plodding fictional stories on banal subjects of no consequenc­e.”

The chanceller­y would not have issued the release at all if The Romanoffs were simply dull, the release went on.

“Dullness may be disagreeab­le, but it seldom causes offense or insult,” it said. “Alas, to the series creator’s great discredit, The Romanoffs manages to do both.”

The duchess’s main problem appears to be the show’s opening credits. These portray, somewhat comically, the murder of Czar Nicholas II and his family.

“To see the martyrdom of the Imperial Family treated as a piece of gory entertainm­ent” — especially in the year of the 100th anniversar­y of their death — “was appalling,” the news release said.

It also criticized a scene on a cruise ship where “costumed dwarfs” pretend to be the czar, his family and Grigory Rasputin, the notorious monk who befriended them.

“Surely standards of decency still count for something in the portrayal of certain events and the individual­s involved,” the release said.

It was unclear if the duchess’s views are shared by the many other people who are — or claim to be — descendant­s of the Romanovs.

A spokesman for Princess Olga Romanoff, a great-niece of Czar Nicholas II who has appeared on reality-TV programs, said that the princess “has no comments at all concerning the Amazon series — she hasn’t seen it.” Rostislav Romanov, a British-Russian painter and another descendant, did not respond to messages seeking comment.

Weiner declined to be interviewe­d about the duchess’s critiques. But her royal news release did not appear to have affected the show: New episodes have since been released.

 ?? Amazon Studios via AP/JAN THIJS ?? Kerry Bishe stars in Amazon’s drama series The Romanoffs.
Amazon Studios via AP/JAN THIJS Kerry Bishe stars in Amazon’s drama series The Romanoffs.

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