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The Queen: Mr. Blair comes to the rescue
By Paul Bond
7 December 2006
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The Queen, directed by Stephen Frears, written by Peter
Morgan
Following their earlier film, The Deal, about the power-broking
deal between Prime Minister Tony Blair and Chancellor Gordon Brown,
director Stephen Frears and scriptwriter Peter Morgan have again
returned to tensions within the British political establishment.
Intercutting dramatized reconstructions with documentary footage,
The Queen covers the period from May to October 1997. Beginning
with Blairs landslide election victory, it focuses on the
week between the death and funeral of Diana Princess of Wales.
The film opens on the day after the election in early May.
As it becomes clear that the Labour Party have won the election,
the royal establishment begins to make preparations to deal with
the incoming government. Blair, they have heard, is intending
to modernize government, beginning with the adoption
of a more informal style. There is some arch comment about whether
Blair has been sent a protocol sheet yet. Queen Elizabeth (Helen
Mirren) points out that it is not up to the winner of a popular
mandate to form a government, it is up to the monarch to invite
them to do so.
The royal household we are shown here is one that is supremely
confident at first in its authority and position. When the queen
and her adviser Robin Janvrin (Roger Allam) discuss whether Blair
will try and update the monarchy, it is (at this point) as something
unthinkable. The monarchs position is so secure that she
can even see herself as being apart from and above the political
life of the country: on polling day, with complete sincerity,
she tells a portraitist painting her that she envies his ability
to vote and the sheer joy of being partial.
The awe felt by the Labour leadership at this authority is
well captured in Blairs nervous fidgeting before his first
audience. Asked why he is nervous, Tony Blair (Michael Sheen,
revisiting the role from The Deal) stammers that Shes
still ... yknow ... the queen. Later in the film Cherie
Blair (Helen McCrory) tells him that all Labour Prime Ministers
go ga-ga for the queen. Mirren has the calm authority of
vested power as she twists the knife in his embarrassment.
The Queen also captures well the archaic ritual and
protocol of the institution. Blair contorts himself awkwardly
so as not to turn his back on the monarch while leaving the room.
Frears film is full of subtle touches suggesting the Labour
Prime Ministers assimilation of these protocols and mannerisms
as, for example, his adoption of Janvrins telephone call
opening, Sorry to disturb, rather than his earlier
more natural informality.
Three months later, though, on August 31, 1997, the monarchy
finds itself adrift following the death of Princess Diana and
her boyfriend in a car crash in Paris. Secluded on their vast
Scottish estate (40,000 acres) at the time of the accident, the
royals initially choose to see Dianas death as a private
matter. Expressing their concern for the welfare of Diana and
Charles sons, their responses are conditioned largely by
their determination to protect the institution of the monarchy.
Prince Philip (James Cromwell) is a hidebound idiot who believes
that the best thing for the boys is to be taken stag-hunting,
with its fresh air, and to be kept from all press
reports. The Queen Mother (Sylvia Syms) is a protective grandmother,
but contemptuous of any undermining of the monarchy. Neither sees
any reason to change any of the longstanding traditions. Their
callousness is captured when Prince Charles (Alex Jennings) checks
to make certain that his staff have made arrangements for a coffin:
if it were left to the royal undertakers, he says, Theyll
bring her back in a wooden crate.
Even Charles, who is portrayed as the most sensitive to the
changed situation, is most concerned about getting a royal plane
to go to Paris to bring back the mother of the heirs to
the throne. Frears and Morgan seem throughout to have toyed
with images of motherhood and nation, and the idea of the monarchy
as a dysfunctional family. They are not entirely successful in
this (it is not a particularly interesting idea), but they do
manage to bring out the royal familys real dysfunctionality,
rooted in the crushing subordination of these individuals to the
age-old institution they represent. As the queen tells Blair,
in an apparently heartfelt comment, Duty first, self secondthats
all Ive ever known.
Expressions of emotion among the royals are stifled and strangled.
Mirren and Jennings, particularly, are brilliant at conveying
this well of emotion without outlet. Emotion is regarded as something
to be expressed privately or not at all. When Charles tells the
princes of their mothers death they are seen in another
room. For all the concern at their welfare expressed by the characters
here, The Queen shows the princes being brought up into
the same stunted tradition. Philips insistence that the
best way for them to deal with their emotions is by channeling
them into bloodsports exemplifies this retardation of humanity.
Similarly, the one moment when the queen expresses any overwhelming
emotion, she is alone on her thousands of acres. As tears well
up in her, Mirren is photographed from behind as if to emphasise
the way in which such expressions of emotion are not quite the
done thing.
One of the films strengths is the way it looks at this
process of subordination through the prism of the loyal retainers,
particularly Janvrin (another fine performance from Allam). When
Blairs speech is broadcast Janvrin suggests that it was
a bit over the top, and is somewhat disconcerted to
find the royal staff in tears at it. Janvrin, professionally loyal
to the point of obsequiousness, is eventually forced to play the
intermediary between various royals and Blair in the attempt to
deal with the changed situation.
It was Blair who rode to the monarchys rescue in 1997,
and the film shows his struggle with them over making the mourning
public and an official occasion. In this, he is forced to confront
their insistence that they know best and can rely on what they
have always done. The queen tells him at one point that nobody
knows the British people better than she does, and she fully expects
them to behave as she predicts.
Blair also has to face the pushy cynicism of those closest
to him. Cherie Blair is portrayed as the most critical of the
monarchy as an institution, but it is certainly not a matter of
principle, even as she mockingly calls Blair Mr. Saviour
of the Monarchy. Her alleged republican sympathies
are little more than the bitterness of a section of the upper
middle class who feel that their wealth and ambitions are restricted
(unlike those of their counterparts in the US) by the existence
of the monarchy and attendant institutions. Differences between
her and her husband on this have a tactical rather than strategic
character. At one point she describes the royals as freeloading
... nutters, to which Blair tells her that it is unimaginable
this country being a republic.
Even more unprincipled is Blairs Director of Communications,
Alistair Campbell (Mark Bazeley). His opposition to the monarchy
is thoroughly shallow and selfish. Campbell appears to judge everything
and everyone by whether they will facilitate or obstruct his progress.
Whereas Blair grows concerned at polls indicating that one in
four support the abolition of the monarchy, Campbell sees only
Blairs increased popularity ratings (and the impact on his
own career presumably).
For all his loyalty to the monarchy, Blairs determination
to save them has more to do with his position than theirs. Calling
Diana the peoples princess (the phrase is Campbells)
and making this his rallying cry, he sought to modernize the monarchy
in line with the fraudulent quasi-populist rhetoric he was employing
in regard to the Labour Party. Sensitive to the landslide electoral
shift that had ended 18 years of Tory rule, Blair was wary of
anything which might serve to emphasise further the distance between
the royal family (and the entire British ruling elite) and ordinary
people, hence his assertion that the people had kept
faith with Diana, and his request that the queen attend
to their [i.e. the publics] grief.
At the same time he is seen as being driven to distraction
by the monarchy, complaining, They screwed up her life,
I hope they dont screw up her death. When the royal
family still refuse to hold a public funeral, Blair answers a
telephone call from the queens household with the question
Have they seen sense? When the royals refuse to fly
a flag at half-mast over Buckingham Palace because they only fly
the flag when the monarch is in residence, Blair cries out in
frustration, Will someone please save these people from
themselves?
In his dealings with the queen, whom he is shown as defending
absolutely, Blair is portrayed as entirely cut-throat. When Elizabeth
is finally persuaded to give a live broadcast (as monarch and
as a grandmother), Cherie observes, She doesnt
mean a word of this. Thats not the point, replies
Blair, Thats how to survive.
Perhaps the most telling expression of this cynicism lies in
the way the film deals with the legacy of Diana herself. Charles
is seen describing the divergence between the real Diana and the
public image of her. He admits that the mythical Diana will probably
win out.
Blair, too, acknowledges that the image of the sainted Diana
was a fiction. Even while he was publicly talking about the
peoples princess, Blair is shown telling Campbell
that she had seemed hell-bent on destroying everything
the queen had ever worked for. The almost casual abandonment of
that image of Diana is significant. She is not directly portrayed
in the film, but there is documentary footage, particularly from
her interview with Martin Bashir. As montage takes us from the
election to August, we see her telling Bashir I am not a
political figure.
Diana comes across as a media-savvy, not particularly bright
and perhaps quite neurotic young woman. What survives in her legacy
is the effort to adapt the monarchy to new circumstances. It is
this that the filmmakers touch on when the queen, watching the
Bashir interview again, says Maybe we were partly to blame.
Blairs use of Diana, given his comments about her attacks
on the monarchy, is shown as quite cynicalalmost as cynical
as the use she made of herself.
What Frears and Morgan do not comment on, however, is the way
in which Diana had welcomed the arrival of Blair into Downing
Street. She had seen in Blair someone with whom she could work
to ensure the future of the monarchy, and the entire establishment.
The Queens critical and intelligent attitude toward
the institutions of state, and their representatives, is welcome.
The lack of respect for the authority figures is healthy. However,
this operates within certain definite limits. The strength and
precision of the performances, and their reverberations, may show
us more than the filmmakers can articulate explicitly. Morgan,
for example, has described the film as primarily affectionate
and sympathetic to all the people involved and with nothing
vicious or defamatory in it.
This can also spill over in the opposite direction, into a
blanket criticism of everyone, whether in power or not. Philip,
watching the television broadcasts, says of the crowds mourning
Dianas death, Theyre sleeping in the streets
and crying ... and they think were mad. The film has
relatively little to say directly about the public commotion over
Dianas death, aside from obliquely making reference to the
political and moral vacuum that existed in British society.
In the absence of an alternative to the repellent conduct the
film portrays, the writer and director find themselves championing
some unlikely figures. Ultimately, it is the queen who is shown
to have adapted most successfully to what she describes as a shift
in values. Invoking the language of New Labour, she tells
Blair at the end of the film that when the world has changed one
must ... modernize. The embracing of this change, ironically,
allows the queen to be seen as stolid, and remaining firmly within
the monarchys traditions. Frears told one reporter that
The queen is steadfast and principled whereas Blair we see
as lacking principles. This is pretty paltry stuff.
In part perhaps it reflects the disillusionment felt by many
of those who voted for Blair in 1997 or who had some vague hopes
that a Labour government would represent a real change after years
and years of Thatcherism. As in The Deal, the filmmakers
are trying to find out where things went wrong. In the same interview
Frears described Blair as such a disappointment.
The Queen ends with a warning to Blair. In the final
audience between monarch and Prime Minister shown here, the queen
puts Blair on notice that his popularity too may suddenly wane,
and he will then have to face suddenly-changed circumstances.
It is a telling moment, and, in light of the massive unpopularity
of the Iraq war in particular, seems one of the filmmakers
most pointed comments.
See Also:
A patchwork, but no bigger
picture
[11 October 2006]
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