Elizabeth: The Golden Age

If these are the 'golden' years please spare us the bad ones

By Geoff Berkshire

October 12, 2007

 
Critic's Rating:
2 1/2

Elizabeth: The Golden Age
Cate Blanchett in "Elizabeth: The Golden Age" (Credit: Laurie Sparham/Universal)
Photos:
On the set of the film "Elizabeth: The Golden Age." On the set of the film "Elizabeth: The Golden Age." On the set of the film "Elizabeth: The Golden Age." On the set of the film "Elizabeth: The Golden Age."
Elizabeth: The Golden Age
Running time:
115 minutes
Rated:
PG-13
Cast:
Cate Blanchett -
Queen Elizabeth I
Geoffrey Rush -
Sir Francis Walsingham
Clive Owen -
Sir Walter Raleigh
Rhys Ifans -
Robert Reston
Jordi Mollà -
King Philip II
See full cast
Director:
Shekhar Kapur
Official Movie Web Site:
http://www.elizabeththegoldenage.net/
Movie Trailer:
View Trailer
Overall User Rating:
2 (2 ratings)
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27 years into her reign as the Queen of England, Elizabeth I (Cate Blanchett) faces a challenge to her throne from Catholic crusaders in Spain and Scotland. At the same time she falls in love with the dashing Sir Walter Raleigh (Clive Owen) but, determined to stay loyal to her position, forces him into a relationship with a lovely younger lady in waiting (Abbie Cornish).

Big question:
Does this sequel to 1998's Oscar-nominated "Elizabeth" live up to its justly acclaimed predecessor?

Skip it:
Blanchett returns to her breakthrough role and proceeds to act up a storm. Unfortunately the rest of director Shekhar Kapur’s bombastic film is just as big as she is, leaving her performance (and the audience) no room to breathe. The camera swoops, swirls and repeatedly assumes a bird's eye view of the action, drawing attention to the filmmaking in a likely attempt to distract from the uninvolving mess of a narrative. The tight plotting and sharp characterizations of "Elizabeth" have been replaced by soap opera-level histrionics, cheesy action scenes and an abundance of bastardized historical figures (Samantha Morton, as Mary Queen of Scots, and Jordi Molla, as King Philip II of Spain, are basically playing cartoons).

Catch it: Well, at least the costumes are pretty...

Bottom line:
Like a bad second season of a breakout TV show, the original was laudable but the sequel's simply laughable.

Bonus:
The nearly ten year gap between the first "Elizabeth" and this sequel may seem like a long time, but maybe it wasn't long enough. Adding to the film's fuzzy portrayal of history: Elizabeth I was 52 at the time of the events depicted in the film, while Blanchett turned 37 during filming.

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