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Queen
Christina (1933)
In MGM's and director Rouben Mamoulian's lavish, classic,
well-produced historical-romance and costume drama that stretched
historical truth - it was a romantically-told biopic about the Swedish
Queen (ethereally-performed by Greta Garbo) who served the Scandinavian
country in the mid-1600s - and faced a dilemma - a choice between
love and royal duty - when she fell in love with a Catholic-practicing
Spanish envoy:
- the film's opening - the crowning of 6 year-old
Christina (Cora Sue Collins) as the Protestant Queen of Sweden,
after her father, King Gustavus Adolphus (C. Montague Shaw) of
Sweden, died in 1632 on the battlefield during the Thirty Years
War; Christina had the proper upbringing: ("Her father, our
King, brought up this child as a boy accustomed her ears to the
sound of cannon fire and sought to mold her spirit after his own");
she vowed to continue fighting until the war was won
Death of Swedish King on Battlefield
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Coronation of 6 year-old Queen Christina
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- the reigning, peace-loving, lovely yet willful 17th
century Swedish Queen (Greta Garbo), now an adult, was ruling on
the throne when she was summoned from hunting and told: "Sweden
now has the commanding place in Europe" after thirty years
of war; she was dismayed by the high casualty reports of 10,000
men lost in the victorious war, and the expensive drain on Swedish
resources: ("A few more victories like this and we will have
to hire foreigners to fight our battles")
- the Queen's heroic, victorious, older Swedish-born
cousin from the warring Swedish army, Prince Palatine Charles X.
Gustavus (Reginald Owen) was about to arrive home from the battlefield,
and she was expected to become betrothed to the national military
hero; the controversial queen of Sweden realized that she was being
forced into the possibility of a politically-correct marriage to
Prince Gustavus, to give her country an heir to the throne; she rejected
the idea of marrying someone she didn't love, and instead flirted
with her handsome and ambitious treasury secretary Count Magnus (Ian
Keith) (but their affair was winding down)
- in Parliament, she listened as all of her constituents
(the nobles, a gallant general, the Archbishop (David Torrence),
and the returning Prince) clamored for more war against the
"barbarians" to avenge the glory of Sweden, but Queen Christina
disagreed with them; the Queen requested another opinion from the down-trodden
peasants who were the ones sacrificed: "But what of the peasants?
You peasants have fought this war"; when a representative from
the peasants proclaimed that they would go when ordered, she commanded: "You
shall go no longer"
The Parliament's Discussion About Further War
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"But what of the peasants?"
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Listening to the Warmongers
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"I want no more of it...I want peace and
peace I will have"
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- with her demands for a proclamation of peace, she
rejected calls for more violence and decreed that the bloody war
would end: "There are other things to live for than wars.
I have had enough of them. We have been fighting since I was in
the cradle and many years before. It is enough. I shall ask the
powers to meet for a speedy and honorable peace. There must be
an end!...Spoils! Glory! Flags and trumpets! What is behind these
high-sounding words? Death and destruction! Triumphals of crippled
men! Sweden victorious in a ravaged Europe. An island in a dead
sea. I tell you, I want no more of it. I want for my people security
and happiness. I want to cultivate the arts of peace. The arts
of life! I want peace and peace I will have"
- meanwhile, the Queen expressed
her romantic attraction to her own neglected and complaining lady-in-waiting
Countess Ebba Sparre (Elizabeth Young) whom she affectionately kissed
on the lips while greeting her; Countess Ebba was unhappy: "I
can't get near you"; Christina explained how she must attend
to her official duties of "ambassadors, treaties, councils" instead
of going sleigh-riding with Ebba, but then she promised to spend
private time with Ebba later (Christina: "Today, I'll dispose
of them by sundown, I promise you, and we'll go away for two or three
days in the country. Wouldn't you like that?" Ebba: "Oh,
I'd love it."); Ebba was also kissed as she was leaving; (later,
it was revealed that Ebba was only pretending to be sympathetic,
concerned, and caring for the Queen, and the Queen confronted and
reprimanded her: "You pretended to be interested in me and my
problems. Your sympathy, your concern - all pretense, underneath
which you resent me") [Note: After finding heterosexual love
herself later in the film, the Queen excused Count Ebba's behavior
and blessed her marital intentions to wed Count Jacob (Edward Norris).]
- a startling statement was made
to Chancellor Oxenstierna (Lewis Stone) by the Queen, after he kept
pressuring her to marry Prince Charles to produce an heir; she expressed
her professed desire to remain a bachelor: (Chancellor: "But
your Majesty, you cannot die an old maid." Christina: "I
have no intention to, Chancellor. I shall die a bachelor!")
- the Queen desired to escape from the
pressures of the Court and her people to marry: ("We want Prince
Charles for our King and Christina for our Queen") - to be lost
and forget her problems in the snow (she had said earlier: "Snow
is like a wide sea. One could go out and be lost in it and forget
the world and oneself"), she prepared to go on a hunt by impersonating
a young boy (by cross-dressing in a young man's clothes) and restlessly
escaped the Stockholm royal court with her trusted servant Aage (C.
Aubrey Smith)
- during her horseback ride, she happened to encounter
a group of Spaniards in a coach that was disabled on its way to Stockholm
- carrying the new Spanish (and Catholic) diplomatic ambassador-envoy
to Sweden, Don Antonio de la Prada (John Gilbert, Garbo's silent
era leading man and lover)
- all travelers were stranded and forced to overnight
in a country inn during a fierce snowstorm; Christina paid the innkeeper
(Ferdinand Munier) for the last room available; later, while standing
on a table that evening, the disguised Christina boldly assessed
the Queen's highly promiscuous behavior in order to settle a wager
and contentious dispute amongst some of the drunken guests: "The
truth is that the Queen has had twelve lovers this past year, a round
dozen"; after being charmed by Don Antonio's wit and intelligence
in the dining room, she was asked to share her bedroom with him and
she reluctantly agreed, knowing full-well that there would be complications
("You shall share my room with me")
- in a sizzling bedroom scene, the Queen soon revealed
her true self to the Spanish ambassador that she was female (but
he remained unaware of her identity as the Queen); the revelation
occurred as she removed her outer garment and averted her eyes downward;
the emissary took a look and was surprised to realize that she had
breasts under her thin blouse - in a double-take, he exclaimed:
"Of course!"
With Eyes Averted
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The Spanish Ambassador's Double-Take
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"Of course!"
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- it was the beginning of a notorious, multi-night
tryst and bedroom scene (before a roaring fire); their love grew
in the bedroom during a clandestine and passionate love affair
that lasted a few days during the snowstorm; before a flickering
fire, she ate grapes meltingly in the flickering firelight with
Don Antonio
The Passionate Tryst in a Country Inn Bedroom: Christina
with Spanish Envoy Don Antonio
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Firelight and Eating Grapes
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Passionate Kisses
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Memorizing Items in the Bedroom
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- later in the after-glow of their heterosexual love-making
(a scene considered offensive by the censors), she caressed objects
in the room (she even touched and hugged a phallic-shaped vertical
stack of wool next to a spinning wheel) and then laid down on the
bed's soft pillow; on the other side of the bed, she touched a
religious picture hanging on the wall and embraced the massive
wooden bedpost (another phallic symbol), and then made sentimental
joyous statements as she 'memorized' every single item: "I
have been memorizing this room. In the future, in my memory, I
shall live a great deal in this room...I have imagined happiness,
but happiness you cannot imagine, happiness you must feel, joy
you must feel. Oh, and this great joy I feel now...This is how
the Lord must have felt when he first beheld the finished world
with all his creatures breathing, living!"
- later in Stockholm, when the Spaniard presented himself
to the femininely-dressed Queen seated on the throne, he recognized
- to his shock - that she was his lover; it was a startling reunion
scene; his mission was to present King Philip IV of Spain's offer
of marriage to her; when they met privately, the ambassador felt
his loyalty to the King had been compromised: ("It isn't pleasant
to have betrayed one's king, to have dishonored him in a far country");
he was relieved when she apologized for seemingly misleading him,
and told him that she had truly fallen in love with him: ("...it
had been so enchanting to be a woman. Not a queen, just a woman in
a man's arms....But I fell in love with you. I love you, Antonio....Forgive
me for being a queen...What do I want? What? I want back that room
in the inn, the snow that fell, the warm fire and the sweet hours
- beloved one")
- the jealous, antagonistic and suspicious Count Magnus
expressed his unrequited affection for the Queen, and then when rejected,
he sought revenge by demonizing her for even considering a Spanish
proposal of marriage, and spreading scandalous rumors and gossip
about Christina's behavior (who was thought to be under the spell
of the Spaniard and witchcraft); she realized rumors were being spread,
and agonized over the dire consequences of her romantic and political
decision; while riding in a sleigh with the ambassador, she saw the
unrest for herself: ("Evidently, my people who are said to love
me, do not wish me to be happy")
- the Queen had to silence a threatening and indignant
mob with torches at the palace by personally appearing at the top
of the castle's outdoor stairs with a steely-eyed presence - she
was able to calm the crowd: "My business is governing and I
have the knack of it as you have yours for your trade by inheritance.
My father was a king, and his father before him. My father died for
Sweden and I live for her. Now my good people, go home to your work
and leave me to mine. My blessing on all of you"
- after Don Antonio had been ordered to leave Sweden
for his own safety, late at night, Christina grew tired with being
Queen, and asked for advice from her Chancellor: ("All my life,
I've been a symbol. A symbol is eternal, changeless, an abstraction.
A human being is mortal and changeable, with desires and impulses,
hopes and despairs. I'm tired of being a symbol, Chancellor. I long
to be a human being....one must live for oneself. After all, Chancellor,
one's own life is all one has")
- in a powerful and shocking abdication scene, rather
than announcing her expected marriage to cousin Prince Charles, she
decided to entirely give up the throne for her love of Don Antonio:
("I am resolved, therefore, here and now, to place in your hands
my abdication from the throne of Sweden"); she appointed Prince
Charles as her successor ("...he is the man best fitted for
the government of this kingdom") and then removed the "emblems
of power" - her sceptre, the heavy, burdensome crown from her
head, and her regal robe
- the delivery of her sad farewell words to her court: "And
now, farewell. I thank Almighty God who caused me to be born of a
royal stock and raised me to be a Queen over so large and mighty
a kingdom. I thank too, those nobles who defended the state when
I was a child and all of you for the fidelity and attachment you've
shown me. Let me look at you once more. And so, let me remember you
with love and loyalty till memory is no more. God bless you. Farewell"
- Queen Christina's plan was to catch up to the departing
Don Antonio, and to rendezvous with him and sail to "the islands
of the moon...a place I've never been"; however, ambitious,
vindictive and jealous courtier and ex-lover Count Magnus destroyed
her dream of love; a fencing duel had already been challenged - it
commenced in a forest setting between the vindictive Count and Don
Antonio - the outcome was left unknown until the liberated Christina
arrived on the deck of the ship and discovered Pedro (Akim Tamiroff)
and Don Antonio's courtiers standing around her mortally-wounded
lover from Magnus' sword; the Spanish envoy was optimistic: "When
the wind is with us, we sail...Spain. My home is on a white cliff
overlooking the sea. You'll never leave me, will you?...Your Majesty"
- and then he tragically expired in her arms
- in the bleak finale, Christina was exiled from Sweden
forever, but she optimistically mused to Aage that she would still
sail on: "The wind is with us"; off-screen, a crew member
shouted out the last words of the film: "All hands on deck.
Let the gangway fall"
- in the concluding sequence, she abandoned Sweden forever
- leaving behind both her Queenship and her dead lover to continue
on to Spain; as the sails bloomed out, she moved to the curved bow
of the ship and stood mutely and pensively as a figurehead; there
was a lengthy, slow-tracking-in final image ending with a close-up
of the proud, unblinking Queen's enigmatic face, gazing into nothingness,
as she proceeded to Spain to face her unknown destiny - before a
final fade to black
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The Enigmatic Close-Up Ending at the Bow of the
Ship
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First View of Adult Queen
Affair with Count Magnus (Ian Keith)
Arrival of Prince Charles Gustavus From the Battlefield
Two Bi-Sexual Kisses for Countess Ebba
"I shall die a bachelor"
Often Dressed in Young Men's Clothing with Her Hunting
Dogs
First View of Spanish Ambassador Don Antonio (John
Gilbert) in Disabled Coach
Together in the Inn
"The Queen Has Had 12 Lovers This Past Year..."
Reunited with the Spanish Ambassador in the Court:
Another Double-Take
The Antagonistic and Jealous Count Magnus
Rekindling Their Love
"Evidently, my people who are said to love
me, do not wish me to be happy"
Confronting the Mob on the Palace Stairs
On the Throne: The Announcement of the Abdication
of the Queen and Appointment of a Successor
Farewell
Fencing Duel Between Magnus and Don Antonio
Death Scene of Don Antonio
"Yes, Aage, we will sail...The wind is with
us"
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