âA Royal Affairâ Is
Sex and Madness
Reviewed by Shirrel Rhoades
Crazy kings -- itâs a historical fact. There have been quite a few.
Some of my favorite Mad Monarchs include:
· Charles VI âThe Madâ of France (1368-1422) - The King who became a murdering madman.
· âMad Kingâ George III of Great Britain (1738-1820) - The King in the straightjacket.
· Gaius âCaligulaâ of Rome (12-31) - The schizophrenic Emperor with a bad temper.
· Gian Gastone de Medici of Tuscany (1671-1737) - The Grand Duke who refused to leave his bed.
· Ivan IV âThe Terribleâ of Russia (1530-1584) - The Tsar who was a rapist and mass murderer.
· âMadâ Ibrahim I of Turkey (1616-1648) - The Sultan who drowned his entire harem.
· Nabonidus of Babylon (539 BC) - The King who ate grass and imagined he was a goat.
Now I can add the mentally ill King Christain VII of Denmark to that list. Heâs the subject (kinda) of a new film called âEn kongelig affæreâ (better known on American circuits as âA Royal Affairâ). Itâs now playing at the Tropic Cinema.
âA Royal Affairâ stars Mikkel Følsgaard (TVâs âThose Who Killâ) as Mad King Christian VII. Swedish actress Alicia Vikander (âAnna Kareninaâ) takes on the role of Caroline Matilda, the member of the British royal family who became Queen of Denmark and Norway. And Mads Mikkelsen (âCasino Royaleâ) portrays Johann Friedrich Struensee, the German doctor who became royal physician to the king -- and de facto regent for the country.
This epic historical drama covers the doctorâs affair with the queen. And the revolution that swelled up in 18th-Century Scandinavia. Ironically, the affair occurs between Struensee and the queen just as his bond with the king is strengthening. As we discover, âChristian cares more for Struensee than for his wife Caroline,â says co-star Mads Mikkelsen. âThatâs the strongest part of the film.â
Danish Director Nikolaj Arcel, (best known as the original screenwriter of âThe Girl With the Dragon Tattooâ) tackles this true story like a tragic romance. âOutside of Denmark nobody really knew about this story until now,â he tells us. âBut itâs very famous in Denmark. Itâs one of the most-famous true stories that we have, historically. But if you go across the border into Germany, for instance, nobody knows about it. So it was our little secret.â
âItâs a part of our history,â explains Mads Mikkelsen, who plays the doctor. âWe know the king was crazy and my character shagged the queen.â
Nikolaj Arcel describes the film as ânot only a historical lesson, but itâs a love story, itâs a love triangle.â
âThe young princess whoâs coming to Denmark and marrying the insane king, and the doctor who comes to town and essentially becomes the king, thereâs a lot of great character studies in that. I think thatâs the way to avoid it being like a stuffy period piece,â he says.
âYou have great passion,â echoes Mikkelsen. âPeople taking over a country, there are executionsâ"and hopefully people will believe it, because itâs all true.â
Nikolaj Arcel expects his subtitled film âEn kongelig affæreâ will give American moviegoers a whole new perspective on Denmark. âPeople almost view Denmark like this little happy place, where everybody is happy, itâs the most-progressive country in the world, things like that. And then you see the complexitiesâ¦.â
srhoades@aol.com
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