Victoria and Abdul

     Nearing the end of her reign and her life, Queen Victoria (Judi Dench: Tulip Fever) sleeps through her routine of parties, banquets and royal audiences. 

     She is wakened from her stupor by Abdul (Ali Fazal: Happy Bhag Jayegi), an Indian clerk who has crossed the ocean to deliver a ceremonial coin to his queen. Chosen for his appearance and height, Abdul rouses Victoria’s interest in life.

     Her request that he serve her raises eyebrows and more as her fascination deepens. When she promotes Abdul to royal Munshi (an Urdu term for teacher and spiritual advisor), her son Bertie (Eddie Izzard: The LEGO Batman Movie) is outraged. He and the royal household conspire to get rid of Abdul and recover their queen.

     At times poignant and often funny, this play of manners gets into trouble of its own while riffing loosely on a little known historic relationship.

     Trying for a political commentary on colonialism, director Stephen Frears (Florence Foster Jenkins) falls into the colonialist mindset he’s seeking to expose. Abdul shows pure devotion to a monarch who has shown nothing but brutality to his people. He is a prop for her growth. 

     Frears also makes the naïve claim that Victoria was cured of ignorant beliefs through their relationship. Harsh laws on the treatment of Indian people during her reign were never revised in her lifetime. Victoria isn’t interested in just any Indian servant but this handsome one. 

     Performances, on the other hand, are fine. Dench, who has played the role of Victoria before in the magnificent Mrs. Brown, delivers a Victoria who is imperious and sharp-eyed but who still has the childish crushes and behavior of a girl. Fazal has much less to do, as his character is fairly well defined by Victoria, but he gamely brings to life Abdul’s devotion. 

     Seek no deeper meaning and take Victoria and Abdul as a light bit of historical comedy. 

Fair Dramedy • PG-13 • 112 mins. 

New this Week

The Foreigner

     Quan Ngoc Minh (Jackie Chan) vows to find the terrorists who killed his daughter in a bombing. The shady government operative behind the bombing (Pierce Brosnan) writes off Quan too quickly, for he has a shady past of his own. 

     Think of this movie as Taken with Jackie Chan. Long reigning king of complex   stunt choreography, Chan comes out of semi-retirement to do his own stunts, dancing through dramatic action sequences. 

Prospects: Bright • R • 114 mins. 

Happy Death Day

     Tree Gelbman (Jessica Rothe) has a terrible birthday. She wakes up in a gross dorm room, she doesn’t feel like going to her party, then she’s brutally murdered. 

     Good thing she gets to wake up to try the day over. And over, as she dies each new day. Finally, she decides to stop her serial killer dead.

     Groundhog Day for the horror crowd, Happy Death Day could make for a great Friday the 13th movie night — if it can keep its sense of humor.

Prospects: Flickering • PG-13 • 96 mins.

Marshall

     This biopic takes us into the early life of future Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall (Chadwick Boseman) as the promising NAACP attorney takes on the case of a driver accused of rape by a prominent Connecticut woman Boseman is a great actor, skilled in the genre. Co-star Josh Gad — more known for comedies and animated movies — is the question mark. 

Prospects: Bright • PG-13 • 118 mins.