
Lonely Planet Best of Germany
Lonely Planet, Marc Di Duca, Catherine Le Nevez and Kerry Christiani
Book
Lonely Planet: The world's leading travel guide publisher Lonely Planet's Best of Germany is your...

Lonely Planet Best of Italy
Lonely Planet, Cristian Bonetto, Duncan Garwood and Abigail Blasi
Book
Lonely Planet: The world's leading travel guide publisher Lonely Planet's Best of Italy is your...

Lonely Planet England
Lonely Planet, Neil Wilson, Fionn Davenport and Oliver Berry
Book
Lonely Planet: The world's leading travel guide publisher Lonely Planet England is your passport to...

Lonely Planet San Francisco
Lonely Planet, Sara Benson, Alison Bing and John A. Vlahides
Book
Lonely Planet: The world's leading travel guide publisher Lonely Planet San Francisco is your...

Lonely Planet the Italian Lakes
Lonely Planet, Anthony Ham and Paula Hardy
Book
Lonely Planet: The world's leading travel guide publisher Lonely Planet The Italian Lakes is your...

James Dean Bradfield recommended Roy Buchanan by Roy Buchanan in Music (curated)

Emeli Sande recommended track Angel of Mine by Eternal in Greatest Hits by Eternal in Music (curated)

Guitar! by Smule
Music and Social Networking
App
Play guitar alongside top singers from our companion app: Sing! Karaoke. Add personal flourishes on...

NAVIGON Eastern Europe
Navigation and Travel
App
With NAVIGON you can turn your iPhone or iPad into a fully functional mobile navigation system....

Bob Mann (459 KP) rated A United Kingdom (2017) in Movies
Sep 29, 2021
Directed by Amma Asante (“Belle”) this is the true tale of a real-life fairy story, featuring a handsome prince and his love, who can never be his princess thanks to the Machievellian schemings of court-do-gooders and bureaucrats.
The prince in this case is Seretse Kham (David Oyelowo, “Selma“) , heir to the throne of Bechuanaland (now Botswana), who meets and falls in love with a lowly white Lloyd’s of London clerk Ruth Williams (Rosamund Pike, “Gone Girl“, “The World’s End“). The plot has many parallels with that of another film from earlier this year: “Loving” with Ruth Negga and Joel Edgerton. As an inter-racial couple in 1947 this is taboo enough, but the fact that Kham is soon to be king in a country bordering the apartheid tinderkeg that is South Africa blows the affair up to be a diplomatic crisis.
Concern in the corridors of power for Prime Minister Atlee (Anton Lesser) being faced up to by the couple’s supporter – a young Anthony Wedgewood Benn (Jack Lowden).
Defying the officials he marries his true love, driving a wedge between both his own uncle (Vusi Kunene ) and sister (Terry Pheto) and making Ruth an outcast in both countries. As things turn from bad to worse, can true love conquer all their adversities?
Just everything about this film delights. Oyelowo and Pike – always a safe pair of hands – add real emotional depth to their roles. Their relationship feels natural and loving without either of them trying too hard. The estrangement of Ruth from her parents (particularly her father played by Nicholas Lyndhurst) is truly touching.
Another star turn is Harry Potter alumni Tom Felton, playing Rufus Lancaster – a weaselly and very unpleasant local official. I have a prediction…. that in 30 year’s time, the young Potter actor that will be the ‘Ian McKellen of his day’ (that is, a world recognized great actor… not necessarily gay!) will be Felton.
Sam McCurdy (“The Descent”) delivers cinematography of Africa that is vibrant (to be fair, for anyone lucky enough to visit Africa will know, cameras just love the place) and the John Barry-esque music by Patrick Doyle (“Murder on the Orient Express“) is pitch perfect for the mood.
When it says “Based on a true story” it means it: the real family.
A beautifully crafted film that older viewers will just love.