Lethbridge Herald

New film reimagines ‘Queen of Scots’ tale

ELEMENTS DON’T QUITE COME TOGETHER

- Lindsey Bahr THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ary, Queen of Scots “is an ambitious reimaginin­g of the Mary Stuart and Elizabeth I saga with modern flourishes and bold performanc­es from Saoirse Ronan and Margot Robbie. But the film, for all its prestige and edginess, its lofty goals and contempora­ry messages, is not a particular­ly engrossing experience.

It’s a shame, too, because most of the elements are there. The gorgeous costumes and meticulous settings are breathtaki­ng, and they couldn’t have chosen two leads better suited to playing these women, with Ronan as Mary and Robbie as Elizabeth. They just don’t come together very well, straddling an awkward line between wanting to be both a modern referendum on the real struggles of being a female leader in the 16th century and a “Game of Thrones”-style actioner. Director Josie Rourke, who has a background in theatre, certainly has a knack for grandeur and drama. But choppy editing and stilted story evolution never really do justice to what should be an epic and suspensefu­l tale of political machinatio­ns and power struggles.

The story itself is fascinatin­g. Mary, a Catholic widowed at 18 from the King of France, returns to Scotland to rule. She has eyes on England, too, which is under the rule of her cousin, Elizabeth I, a Protestant who refuses to marry and produce an heir. A husband, Elizabeth accurately concludes, will just try to take the throne from her. And the men in both of their camps try their best to make a peaceful relationsh­ip between the two countries impossible.

But the question of a successor remains and becomes urgent when Mary comes back on the scene and starts making her own claims to the throne. The two rulers correspond and negotiate in an elaborate game of chess in which everyone is attempting to manipulate an unstable situation. Elizabeth tries to offer up a husband to Mary, in her own lover Robert Dudley (Joe Alwyn), as a strategic plant. But, Mary, seeing through the plan, weds another Englishman, the charismati­c Lord Darnley (Jack Lowden), ensuring that her offspring would have a legitimate claim to the throne.

There are interestin­g ideas to explore about being a powerful woman in this time. But the script from “House of Cards” creator Beau Willimon seems to oversimpli­fy things. He imagines a relationsh­ip that devolves mostly because of Elizabeth’s jealousy of Mary’s youth, beauty and ability to bear children. This point is hammered over and over, as Elizabeth, hearing that Mary is pregnant, gathers her skirt to just see what she would look like pregnant in silhouette. The birth scene is even more noxious, cutting back and forth from Mary in labour, to poor, sad Elizabeth creating the only thing she can — paper flowers.

The film takes enormous liberties with history, bringing the two rulers together for a face-to-face conversati­on, and infusing the cast with more diverse faces and themes to varying degrees of success. That conversati­on that apparently never happened is well worth the factual leniency. It’s the scene that the whole film is building toward and both

 ??  ?? This image released by Focus Features shows Saoirse Ronan as Mary Stuart in a scene from “Mary Queen of Scots.”
This image released by Focus Features shows Saoirse Ronan as Mary Stuart in a scene from “Mary Queen of Scots.”

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