Mary Queen of Scots
Historical events seem to continue through more facts as the story tells about the troubled life of Mary Stewart's charismatic character. This historical story began with Mari, who was the queen of France at the age of 16, where she wanted to return to her homeland in Scotland to regain her rightful throne. Perhaps at that time it will be very difficult because Scotland and England fall under Elizabeth I. Both Mary and Elizabeth seem to look at each other in a state of fear and magic.
April 1, 1971 in Ayr, Scotland, UK
18 April 1971, Bathgate, West Lothian, Scotland, UK
2 June 1990, Chelmsford, Essex, England, UK
February 10, 1986 in London, England, UK
1994, Romania
21 February 1991, London, England, UK
14 August 1968, Birmingham, England, UK
7 April 1987, Puerto Rico
February 27, 2019
A busy-looking catalogue of events that never adds up to a story.February 24, 2019
Mary Queen of Scots feels like two hours of pointless power games.February 19, 2019
Mary Queen of Scots fails as cinema and as revolutionary tract.March 02, 2019
No punches are pulled in this bruising period piece, from the ofttimes shocking violence to the ugly gender politics that dog Mary at every turn.December 14, 2018
If it's not quite a success, at least it's an ambitious failure.March 04, 2019
Mary Queen of Scots is a film worth seeing, due above all to its historical value. [Full review in Spanish]December 14, 2018
A dramatic but unreliable account of Mary's tenuous rule over Scotland and deadly rivalry with Elizabeth I of England.December 21, 2018
Mary Queen of Scots is a tawdry soap opera that insists it's an intelligent political thriller.February 27, 2019
Robbie excels as the Queen who is jealous of Mary's sassiness and beauty, but it is the sensational Ronan who rules the day.December 14, 2018
[A] lack of consistency makes far too many pivotal plot points seem arbitrary, as if the filmmakers realized, "we have to get things moving!"December 13, 2018
"Mary Queen of Scots" feels like sitting through a history lesson, and not a particularly enlightening one.January 16, 2019
This is a heartfelt, serious-minded film about 16th-century power politics from screenwriter Beau Willimon and director Josie Rourke, theatrically conceived, and influenced by Shekhar Kapur's Elizabeth.