Tag Archive: Kristen Stewart


SPENCER directed by Pablo Larraín (UK/USA/Germany/Chile, 2021)

With ‘Diana – The Musical’ winning this year’s Razzie for the worst movie of the year, I approached a viewing of a biopic of Diana Spencer with a certain degree of trepidation.  Fortunately, this fine movie presents a more nuanced and challenging portrait of the ill-fated princess.

It’s a tough project to take on because, since her passing, Lady Di’s image has become almost uncorruptable.  Being dead gives her a unique advantage. The fatal car crash in Paris means she is forever young; an English rose that never wilts. As Shakespeare wrote of Cleopatra : “Age cannot wither her, nor custom stale”. The same most certainly cannot be said of Camilla – the current Queen in waiting. At 74, she is reasonably well preserved by can’t hope to hold a candle (in the wind) to the permanently glowing image of Diana who at 36 was more than half her age when she died in 1997.

I was curious to see if Chilean filmmaker Pablo Larraín would dare to challenge the myth that has built up around the so-called ‘people’s princess’. His brilliant reappraisal in 2016 of Jackie Kennedy (Jackie) showed that Larraín was prepared to take an unconventional approach to storytelling and present an outsider’s pov. With ‘Spencer’ he shows that this was no one-off.

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STILL ALICE  directed by Richard Glatzer and Wash Westmoreland (USA, 2014)

This moving and sobering film is based on a bestseller by Lisa Genova. Her novel was initially self published after being rejected by numerous publishers who believed that readers would not be interested in such a depressing subject. Just goes to show what they know!

The movie vindicates Genova’s decision to choose a woman with an early onset of Alzheimer’s as a means showing the devastating effect of dementia on an active, otherwise healthy, individual’s life. This is a film about living with the disease rather than dying from it.

Catherine Shoard, writing in The Guardian, gets it spectacularly wrong when she says that the film “perpetuates the notion that dementia is more tragic when it affects the intellectual”. It does nothing of the kind.

The fact that Alice is a respected university professor of linguistics in no way suggests that the loss of communication would be any less devastating in a less prestigious job, as a film critic for example! Continue reading