MOVIE REVIEW: A Royal Night Out

Published Jul 17, 2015

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A ROYAL NIGHT OUT

DIRECTOR: Julian Jarrold

CAST: Sarah Gadon, Emily Watson, Jack Reynor, Rupert Everett, Roger Allam, Bel Powley

CLASSIFICATION: 10-12 PG D

RUNNING TIME: 97 minutes

RATING: ****

It is VE Day and the two young princesses Elizabeth (Gadon) and Margaret (Powley) are “completely cheesed” at being locked away in a “ghastly mausoleum” (that is to say, Buckingham Palace) when the rest of Britain is celebrating. They persuade Daddy and Mummy (a stuttering Everett as George VI about to give his king’s speech and a clucking Watson as Queen Elizabeth) to allow them out to celebrate “incognito” with the rest of the London crowds.

Jarrold’s film takes a slither of an anecdote (apparently, the princesses really did join the VE Day festivities) and builds a Smiles of a Summer Night-like comedy around it. Elizabeth (an improbably beautiful Gadon, speaking in a Celia Johnson-like voice) and Margaret quickly wriggle free from their chaperones, become separated from each other and have a turbulent night. Their travels take them from nightclubs to knocking shops, from the fountains of Trafalgar Square to Chelsea Barracks. Their drinks are spiked. They encounter spivs, bus drivers, prostitutes, nightclub heavies and leering officers who try to spike their drinks.

Much of the film is concerned with Elizabeth’s blossoming relationship with the working-class airman Jack (Reynor) who has gone AWOL and will be arrested if the Military Police get near him. He is staunchly republican and doesn’t think much of pampered princesses in high-heeled shoes.

It is here that A Royal Night Out becomes skewered on the horns of a dilemma from which it can never quite wriggle free. On the one hand, it is trying to be a romantic comedy. On the other, the screenwriters realise the very suggestion that the young Elizabeth might have had a fling with an airman verges on the treasonous. The film begins to pull its punches and to become ever more improbable.

Even so, this is a poignant, entertaining affair, with enough of a satirical edge not just to seem like an exercise in cosy British nostalgia. Gadon is exceptional as the cocooned young princess who adjusts with surprising pragmatism to life beyond the palace gates.

The Independent

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