Queen Christina of Sweden abdicates and travels to Rome to embrace the Catholic Church.Queen Christina of Sweden abdicates and travels to Rome to embrace the Catholic Church.Queen Christina of Sweden abdicates and travels to Rome to embrace the Catholic Church.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaRuth Wolff's play, The Abdication, premiered at England's Bristol Old Vic Company in 1971 with Gemma Jones as the Swedish queen. It was later picked up for productions in the U.S., Italy, the Netherlands and Montreal. Although in history, Christina was met by the pope on her arrival and showered with gifts, Wolff fictionalizes the past to have the pope send Azzolino to interview Christina to determine whether she's worthy of such a meeting. This allows the playwright to use their meetings to consider the relationship between women and power in a patriarchal world.
- Quotes
Cardinal Azzolino: She made you hate women?
Queen Kristina: Hate women? Surely you know the worst thing I'm accused of - isn't hating women.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Liv Ullmann scener fra et liv (1997)
Featured review
This film was shown once on local TV in the early 1980s (but I was too young to watch it) and then fell completely off the radar in the interim; however, thanks to the God-sent overhaul that TCM UK has finally decided to give its long-decaying schedule of endlessly-repeated titles, I was able to finally catch up with it after some 25 odd years! Not because the film has any kind of reputation per se but its credentials are certainly impeccable and European History has always been one of my favorite subjects in school (and one in which I excelled in). The story of Sweden's Queen Christina had already been dealt with magnificently by Rouben Mamoulian in his eponymous 1933 film which had provided Greta Garbo with arguably her greatest role; this being made a good 40 permissive years later, the independent-minded Protestant monarch (Liv Ullmann) renounces her faith and throne to sneak into the Vatican and pour out her lesbian longings for a childhood friend onto a Roman Catholic Cardinal (Peter Finch) engaged to investigate her well-documented wanton ways and her newly-professed piety! The two stars, reunited a year after Ross Hunter's maligned 1973 musical version of LOST HORIZION, are practically the whole show here despite being surrounded by opulent sets and a cast of thespian notables: Cyril Cusack (as Christina's guardian), Graham Crowden (as a fellow Cardinal), Edward Underdown and Kathleen Byron (as, respectively, Christina's chivalrous father and embittered mother) and diminutive Michael Dunn (in his last film as Christina's enigmatic servant). Celebrated cinematographer Geoffrey Unsworth shoots the opening abdication scenes in moody candlelight, bathes the film in mist during Christina's childhood reminiscences and lends it a sunny look during her liberated passages; Nino Rota's music score is also appropriately sensitive or soaring according to the film's moods. Incidentally, another failed historical/religious charade featuring Liv Ullmann I would like to see is Michael Anderson's POPE JOAN (1972)
who knows if TCM UK will likewise surprise me and provide the opportunity to catch up with it in the not-too-distant future?
- Bunuel1976
- Feb 14, 2009
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- En drottning abdikerar
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $181,809
- Runtime1 hour 43 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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