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Elizabeth: The Golden Age (2007)
National Catholic Register ^ | Steven Gredanus

Posted on 10/13/2007 7:53:43 AM PDT by Frank Sheed

Elizabeth: The Golden Age (2007)

Directed by Shekhar Kapur. Cate Blanchett, Geoffrey Rush, Clive Owen, Abbie Cornish, Samantha Morton, Jordi Mollà.

From a National Catholic Register review

By Steven D. Greydanus

A lurid sort of Christopher Hitchens vision of history pervades Elizabeth: The Golden Age, Shekhar Kapur’s sequel to his 1998 art-house hit Elizabeth.

The earlier film, which made a star of Cate Blanchett as the eponymous Virgin Queen, celebrated the triumph of bright, happy Elizabethan Protestantism over the dark, unwholesome Catholic world of Bloody Mary. Even so, that film’s church-bashing was tame compared that of this sequel, in which everything bad, evil and corrupt in the world ultimately is ultimately the bitter fruit of Religion. And by Religion, I mean Catholicism.

Yes, technically Protestantism might be a form of religious devotion too. But The Golden Age carefully expunges anything like actual belief or religiosity from its minimal portrayal of the faith affiliation of its heroine. Elizabeth might kneel in a brightly lit church in decorously silent, solitary prayer, but it’s Catholics who pray out loud, usually in spooky Latin, read from prayer books and clutch rosary beads, surround themselves with ominous berobed clerics bestowing church sanction on all manner of sinister goings-on, and worst of all, have religious ideas and motivations.

If someone says something like “God has spoken to me,” it’s a sure bet that (a) the speaker is a Catholic, and (b) whatever God had to say spells trouble for non-Catholics. Ditto any reference to “true believers,” “God’s work,” “legions of Christ,” you name it. In this world, God-talk is troubling Catholic behavior; Protestants don’t talk to, or about, God. Their religion is little more than a slogan for conscience, religious freedom, and of course heroic resistance to Catholic oppression.

“I will not punish my people for their beliefs — only for their deeds,” says Elizabeth, conveniently forgetting that in the last movie she rammed the Act of Uniformity through Parliament, outlawing the Catholic Mass and imposing compulsory attendance at Anglican services. In this version of history, the hosts of Catholics martyred under Elizabeth are all traitors and conspirators. “Every Catholic in England is a potential assassin,” Elizabeth’s advisors helpfully remind her in an early scene. Well, then, every Catholic in England is a potential political prisoner too.

Historically, the film is very loosely tethered to events from the 1580s, notably the execution of Mary Stuart (wasted Samantha Morton) and the defeat of the Spanish Armada of Philip II of Spain (Jordi Mollà). Opening titles inform us that Philip (a “devout Catholic,” in case you were wondering) has “plunged Europe into holy war,” and “only England stands against him.” Whom this holy war is being waged against, if “only England stands against him,” is not specified. Presumably the reference is to resistance to Turkish encroachment in the Mediterranean, but far be it from The Golden Age to muddy the waters of Catholic warmongering by mentioning Muslim expansion.

In attacking England, Philip is convinced that he’s on a mission from God: “England is enslaved to the devil,” he declares. “We must set her free.” Certain that God is on his side as he leads his nation into a holy war that becomes a debacle, Philip couldn’t be a blacker, nuttier Hollywood villain if his middle initial were W. Other flirtations with topicality in this pre-election year include assassins and conspirators praying secretly in a foreign language while plotting their murderous attacks, and the Machiavellian Sir Francis Walsingham (returning Geoffrey Rush) torturing a captured conspirator during an interrogation. (Tom Hollander, who costarred with Rush in the Pirates of the Caribbean sequels, is running around somewhere in this picture, an odd juxtaposition in another film that ends with a sea battle with cannons.)

The film does go on to concede that the Spanish have other grievances against the English besides religion, such as the Queen’s tolerant stance on English pirates like Walter Raleigh (Clive Owen) raiding Spanish ships. But it’s all a big circle: The raids are rationalized on the grounds that Philip is Elizabeth’s enemy, and the more gold English privateers seize from Spanish vessels, the less Philip has to wage war on England. That the raids give Philip more justification for going to war hardly matters, since we already know that he’s on a mission from God.

The romanticized Hollywood view of heroic English piracy against the galleons of Catholic Spain in old Errol Flynn–type movies like The Sea Hawk has always rubbed me the wrong way, and it hasn’t gotten any better with the passing of time. Or the substitution of Owen for Flynn.

The film’s romantic intrigues are if possible duller than its religio-political ones, though here at least the actors are able — occasionally — to rise above their material. Not always; in some scenes even Blanchett seems absurdly lost amid the puerility of her character’s romantic woes.

The original Elizabeth imagined the young queen carrying on a flagrant affair with Robert Dudley, the Earl of Leicester (Joseph Fiennes), but ended with its protagonist reinventing herself as a kind of Protestant Madonna figure, an iconic “Virgin Queen” (or at least “Like A Virgin” Queen, to borrow a phrase from another self-reinventing Madonna).

In this film, Elizabeth maintains her celibate image, her singleness given a feminist gloss in a closing monologue: “Unmarried, I have no master; childless, I am mother to my people. God give me strength to bear this mighty freedom.” The freedom of the single career woman!

As in the earlier film, the queen holds herself aloof from the constant pressure to marry and produce an heir, though there is no shortage of unsuitable suitors. There are more sparks with Raleigh, though he is more drawn to dewy young Bess (Abbie Cornish), a favored lady-in-waiting on whom the queen in turn dotes tenderly enough to suggest that the triangle goes all the way around. (There were also hints of something between Elizabeth and a lady-in-waiting in the original film.)

Elizabeth’s wonder at Raleigh’s rhapsodic account of his arrival in the New World is about as close to a positive religious experience as The Golden Age can muster. The ocean, Elizabeth muses, is a very “image of eternity,” and she wonders, “Do we discover the new world, or does the new world discover us?”

When it comes to literal religiosity, though, The Golden Age’s sensibilities are wholly unsympathetic. The climax, a weakly staged destruction of the Spanish Armada, is a crescendo of church-bashing imagery: rosaries floating amid burning flotsam, inverted crucifixes sinking to the bottom of the ocean, the rows of ominous berobed clerics slinking away in defeat.

Pound for pound, minute for minute, Elizabeth: The Golden Age could possibly contain more sustained church-bashing than any other film I can think of. Certainly the premise of The Da Vinci Code was far more objectionable, and The Magdalene Sisters was more absolute in its moral color-coding. (The torture of a young Catholic conspirator, even though guilty, represents a shade of grey that The Magdalene Sisters’s black-and-white approach would never have permitted.)

But in The Da Vinci Code the heavies were a secret cabal within the Church, not the visible hierarchy and all Catholics everywhere. An albino monk assassin is one thing (Opus Dei not being available in the sixteenth century, this film’s priest-assassin is supplied by the Jesuits). Here, “every Catholic in England” is at least potentially an assassin. The Magdalene Sisters may have been agitprop, but it highlighted genuine abuses within a Catholic institution, rather than depicting the Church and the Catholic faith as a force for evil and celebrating resistance to Catholicism as heroic humanism.

How is it possible that this orgy of anti-Catholicism has been all but ignored by most critics? As with The Da Vinci Code, early reviews of The Golden Age seem to be roundly dismissive, while sticking to safe, noncommittal charges of general lameness.[*]

If the object of the film’s vitriol were any group outside Christendom — say, if praying in Arabic were the sure sign of dangerous fanaticism, and if a Muslim prince were making holy war on Christendom with the blessings of all the eminent imams — would there be any shortage of critical objections to such stereotyping? As a lover of film criticism as well as film, I find the reviews more depressing than the film.


* Note: One of the few reviews in a major outlet that doesn’t ignore the film’s anti-Catholicism ran in my local New York area paper, the Newark Star-Ledger. Critic Stephen Whitty writes that the film “equates Catholicism with some sort of horror-movie cult, with scary close-ups of chanting monks and glinting crucifixes. There’s even a murderous Jesuit, played by Rhys Ifans like a Hammer-movie bad guy, or a second cousin to poor pale Silas from The Da Vinci Code.”

A sexual encounter (nothing explicit); brief rear female nudity; some crude language; a couple of gory torture/mutilation scenes and non-explicit execution/killings.



TOPICS: Catholic; Religion & Culture
KEYWORDS: anglosphere; anglosphererules; anticatholicism; antimoronism; antispaniardism; cinema; elizabeth; goldenage; moviereview; movies
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To: Frank Sheed

I’m looking forward to this, myself.


21 posted on 10/13/2007 3:07:18 PM PDT by Tax-chick ("Is there any extra food around here anywhere?")
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To: Frank Sheed

“Bella,” I mean. I just don’t care for Cate Blanchett, no matter what she’s in . We saw “Elizabeth,” and all I really liked was the costumes (although I was early Anglo-Norman, myself, I can appreciate Tudor styles for their technology).

I’ve found Steven Greydanus’s reviews very helpful for the past several years.


22 posted on 10/13/2007 3:09:23 PM PDT by Tax-chick ("Is there any extra food around here anywhere?")
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To: Frank Sheed
I’ll wait to see a TRUE story and one that is an Award Winner as well—Bella.

And why do we want to see this? The trailer made it look confusing and unpleasant. Confusing and unpleasant I can get in real life without having to pay $10 a ticket.

23 posted on 10/13/2007 3:12:06 PM PDT by Fairview ( Everybody is somebody else's weirdo.)
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To: Tax-chick

I liked the first one, but the history wasn’t great. I just try to ignore the rampant Anti-Catholicism of the movie. I’ll do that for a good historical epic.


24 posted on 10/13/2007 4:06:45 PM PDT by StAthanasiustheGreat (Vocatus Atque Non Vocatus Deus Aderit)
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To: Frank Sheed

Oy. How disappointing. I’ve always been fascinated by that time in history. Too bad.


25 posted on 10/13/2007 4:20:23 PM PDT by trisham (Zen is not easy. It takes effort to attain nothingness. And then what do you have? Bupkis.)
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To: Noumenon
Where did the Renaissance take place? In priest-infested Italy? If the Catholic Church was stifling knowledge, how could the Renaissance happen in the most Catholic place in Europe? Most of what you think that you know about the "Inquisition" is pure myth and bigotry. Free YOUR mind.
http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/madden200406181026.asp
26 posted on 10/13/2007 5:10:05 PM PDT by irishjuggler
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To: Fairview; Tax-chick; trisham

>>>And why do we want to see this?<<<

BECAUSE....

“I like life! Life likes me!
Life and I fairly fully agree
Life is fine! Life is good!
‘Specially mine which is just as it should be!
I like pouring the wine and why not? (eh, Mrs. Tax?)
Life’s a pleasure that I deny not

I like life here and now
Life and I made a mutual vow
Till I die, life and I,
We’ll both try to be better somehow
And if life were a woman she would be my wife
(S says) Why?
(G) Why? Because I like life!
(S says) That’s all very well for you but not for me. I hate life.
(G says) Scrooge, you’re an even bigger fool than I took you for!
Now you listen to me. (Trisham, join in!)
(G) I like life.
(G says) Well, go on!
(S) I like life
(G says) That’s better!
(G) Life likes me
(S) Life likes me
(G says) Good! Good!
(G) I make life a perpetual spree
(S) Perpetual spree
(G) Eating food (Frank smiles)
(S) Drinking wine (Everyone smiles)
Thinking who’d like the privilege to dine me
I like drinking the drink I’m drinking (Guinness, frankly!)
(G says) That’s better, Scrooge!
(G) I like thinking the thoughts I’m thinking
I like songs, I like dance
I hear music and I’m in a trance
(S) Tra la la!
(G) Oompapah!
(both) Chances are we shall get up and prance
(G) Where there’s music and laughter happiness is rife
(S) Why?
(G) Why? Because I like LIFE!

(both) Where there’s music and laughter happiness is rife
Why? Because I like life
See how much we like life!” (JUST AS GOD INTENDED!)

Cheers!

F


27 posted on 10/13/2007 5:19:22 PM PDT by Frank Sheed (Fr. V. R. Capodanno, Lt, USN, Catholic Chaplain. 3rd/5th, 1st Marine Div., FMF. MOH, posthumously.)
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To: NYer
Bella comes out on October 26th.
28 posted on 10/13/2007 5:23:22 PM PDT by It's me
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To: Frank Sheed

I only saw a preview but it was obvious this is fodder for the kind of people who have a fondness for anti-Catholic lies.


29 posted on 10/13/2007 5:36:17 PM PDT by Varda
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To: irishjuggler

Amen. The Renaissance was a by-product of centuries of Catholic enquiry into science, and antiquity (classical Latin, sculpture, philosophy, etc.).

If the Catholic Church has a monopoly on knowledge it was due to her incredibly hard work and support of the arts and sciences.

And you’re right about the Inquisition too. As Henry Kamen showed in his 1998 book, The Spanish Inquisition, most of what we think we know about the Spanish Inquisition is myth.


30 posted on 10/13/2007 6:00:27 PM PDT by vladimir998 (Ignorance of Scripture is ignorance of Christ. St. Jerome)
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To: MNJohnnie

There is something called the black lengend, and the liberal Spanish historian, De Madiaga, no great friend of the Church, devoted a book to the debunking of it. Phillip was a very diffident religious warrior. He did set the Inquistion on the Protestants in the Netherlands for the same reason that Elizabeth set her secret service on the Catholics: they opposed his government of the Netherlands. In 1588 he finally mounted an invasion of England because for many years Elizabeth had aided the rebels in the Netherlands, had even sent an army to help them. The war between England and Spain was mainly a trade war. It was religious in that if Elizabeth were deposed, a Catholic prince would be put on her throne. But heresy was not Phillip’s main objection to the English government.


31 posted on 10/13/2007 8:32:47 PM PDT by RobbyS ( CHIRHO)
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To: stripes1776

The executions cost Mary much popularity but Mary was followed by a Protestant was because Elizabeth was a Protestant. The allegiance of the people was to the House of Tudor, which is why the attempt to replace Mary with Jane Grey was a failure. Mary had the beter claim to succession. If Mary had lived another twenty years, England would have remained a Catholic country at least until Elizabeth suceeded her.


32 posted on 10/13/2007 8:40:16 PM PDT by RobbyS ( CHIRHO)
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To: Frank Sheed

What?

Galadriel was NOT a protestant! I think she was some sorta elven counter-culture hemp-stress or something.

But she still gave Frodo that vial of holy water, so she HAD to have at least spent some time under the ruler of the nuns.

Perhaps she was ticked off that her author, JRR, a Catholic, didn’t let her get medieval on some orcs in the end. Payback can be ugly.


33 posted on 10/13/2007 8:56:44 PM PDT by Ottofire (Works only reveal faith, just as fruits only show the tree, whether it is a good tree. -MLuther)
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To: stripes1776
Elizabeth (reinged 1558-1603) executed fewer Catholics in her 45 years on the throne than the Catholic Mary I

Rubbish. Elizabeth I in the norhtern rebellion alone executed 800 Catholics. Mary was said to have executed 250 people. In Ireland the numbers were far higher. Walter Ralegh himself executed 600 Irishmen who were most likely Catholic in Smerwick.

Anglicism of this day was imposed by pure thuggery in Ireland. Many Priests and fathful were hanged so many as can't be reliably counted.

She was a butcher Queen.
34 posted on 10/13/2007 9:18:22 PM PDT by Dominick ("Freedom consists not in doing what we like, but in having the right to do what we ought." - JP II)
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To: RobbyS
Mary was followed by a Protestant was because Elizabeth was a Protestant.

That is correct. The Protestants were so outraged at Mary's butchery, they insisted that Elizabeth become queen, even though Catholics claimed she was an illegitimate child and therefore ineligible to accede to the throne.

If Mary had lived another twenty years, England would have remained a Catholic country at least until Elizabeth suceeded her.

You don't know that. No one does. That is pure speculation. It is called a fallacy of induction, more specificallly a fallacy of false cause. There are certainly other possibilities. She might have been sent into exile or fled for her life because of a Protestant revolt, and indeed lived for twenty more years. Or she might have been put into prison for twenty years. Or she might have had a conversion experience and become Protestant. No body knows what would have happened. Let's keep the discussion to what happened. When I want wild fantasy, I read novels, not biography.

35 posted on 10/13/2007 9:31:01 PM PDT by stripes1776
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To: Dominick
Rubbish. Elizabeth I in the norhtern rebellion alone executed 800 Catholics. Mary was said to have executed 250 people. In Ireland the numbers were far higher. Walter Ralegh himself executed 600 Irishmen who were most likely Catholic in Smerwick.

From The Western Heritage by Donald Kagan, Steven Ozment, Frank M. Turner:

Despite proven cases of Catholic treason and even attempted regicide, she [Elizabeth] executed fewer Catholics during her forty-five years on the throne than May Tudor had executed Protestants during her brief five-year reign.

I tend to trust anything with Donald Kegan's name attached to it. I have read the estimates someplace, don't remember where, but will do some research to find them.

What are your sources? By the way, armed combart is not execution.

36 posted on 10/13/2007 9:49:03 PM PDT by stripes1776
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To: Dominick

Shakespeare.


37 posted on 10/13/2007 11:23:24 PM PDT by onedoug
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To: RobbyS
I guess I see your point. For Catholics this is sort of a blood libel. Like the way the “Protocols of the Elders of Zion” is for Jews. One of those historic lies that absolutely must be refuted when ever it rears it’s ugly head.
38 posted on 10/14/2007 2:41:56 AM PDT by MNJohnnie (Yo Democrats : Don't tell us how to fight the war, we will not tell you how to be the village idiots)
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To: stripes1776

That refers to England alone. Somehow the vile way that England govered Ireland as a colonial master is never brought to the foreground. BTW, Many of the Protestants whom Mary executed were anabaptists and Elizabeth was not much easier on them when she came to power than she was on Catholics. Most of the Anglicans were willing to change their religion to save their necks.


39 posted on 10/14/2007 3:20:06 AM PDT by RobbyS ( CHIRHO)
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To: Frank Sheed

And everyone knows that Catholics are responsible for global warming too! :) Thanks for posting the review. It looks like just another tiresome anti-Catholic film to avoid.


40 posted on 10/14/2007 6:24:05 AM PDT by NewCenturions ( By The Great Horn Spoon !)
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