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A Royal Affair

Their love affair would divide a nation.

It has been a good few months for costume dramas. With Lincoln and Anna Karenina, the kind of period-accurate historical films that so often have the personality and verve of waxed fruit have instead exhibited rare vigour and vision. A Royal Affair, Nikolaj Arcel’s fascinating portrait of 18th-century Denmark, is no exception. The true story of a progressive physician who brought Enlightenment values to the country by way of his friendship with an addled young king, this absorbing drama epitomizes what it takes to make history come alive on screen, creating the sense of an immediate, firsthand atmosphere while never getting bogged down in fussy detail for its own sake. And never underestimate good casting. Mads Mikkelsen plays the complicated hero of A Royal Affair, a Hamburg doctor named Johann Struensee who, when he is fetched to treat King Christian VII, becomes the mercurial leader’s trusted adviser, political ally and best friend. The fact that Struensee eventually falls in love with Queen Caroline Mathilda (Alicia Vikander) makes A Royal Affair a bodice ripper as well as a history lesson. But the title could just as easily pertain to the relationship between the two men, whose friendship and its eventual demise are every bit as headstrong, contradictory, passionate and tragic as the romance that plays out on its edges. Mikkelsen easily proves why he’s Denmark’s leading leading man, playing Struensee with a combination of reserve and quiet sex appeal, and Vikander possesses a natural, earthy beauty that is well suited to her character’s journey from innocence to desperation. But it’s Mikkel Boe Folsgaard as Christian who steals A Royal Affair from under the attractive couple’s noses in a performance that lends the often incoherent, often abusive monarch surprising sympathy and pathos. As it chronicles a society’s debate between being guided by religious dogma or reason, A Royal Affair often resonates with contemporary political relevance. But even appreciated simply as a little-known chapter of European history, it proves consistently engrossing, edifying and affecting. – Ann Hornaday, The Washington Post Official Trailer
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Directed by: 
Nikolaj Arcel
Running Time: 
137
Country(ies): 
Denmark
Language: 
In Danish, English, German, and Swedish, with English subtitles.
Starring: 
Mads Mikkelsen, Alicia Vikander, Mikkel Boe Følsgaard
Screenplay by: 
Rasmus Heisterberg, Nikolaj Arcel Based on the novel by Bodil Steensen-Leth

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