something rotten in denmark
by Douglas Messerli
Nikolaj Arcel and Rasmus Heisterberg
(screenplay, based on a book by Bodil Steensen-Leth), Nikolaj Arcel (director) En kongelig affære (A Royal Affair) / 2012
In 2009, in a conversation with
Polish writer-director Zbigniew Kaminski, I was asked if I knew of any good new
books which he might adapt for film production in Poland. Having just read Per
Olav Enquist’s historical fiction, The
Royal Physician’s Visit (see My Year
2001), I suggested that title and, if I remember correctly, even loaned him
my copy of the book.
He felt, evidently, since that the film would have to be shot in
Denmark, it would be too expensive for his company. However, some film company
did ultimately buy those rights, planning to make an English-language movie,
but evidently had difficulty in getting funding.
The result, A Royal Affair
(2012), is a resplendent tale of the beautiful Caroline Matilda of Great
Britain (Alicia Vikander), her mad young husband, Christian VII of Denmark
(Mikkel Følsgaard), and Johann Friedrich Struensee (Mads Mikkelsen), the royal
physician with whom Matilda has an affair.
But the real center of this film is revealed early on as a momentary
transition between the medievally-run country of 18th Denmark and its brief
transformation into an enlightened nation, the fact of which led Voltaire
himself to pen a letter to the King. And, in this sense, Struensee, a reader of
enlightenment writers such as Jean-Jacques Rousseau and Voltaire, who
manipulates his young royal charge to oppose of privy council—who actually rule
the country with Christian offering merely his signature—and to pass radical
changes for the good of the Danish people, including universal inoculation
against smallpox, a clean-up of Copenhagen’s filthy streets, and other
important changes, some 1,069 decrees in all.
In Enquist’s version of the tale, Christian—whose major passions appear
to be theater and whores—is perceived as quite literally mad; but here we are
more uncertain about his mental instability, having to wonder whether, as the
wise physician seems to suggest, if it isn’t simply a pose to free himself from
the responsibilities of state. As he says early on in his battles with the
privy council:
Who is more disturbed, the King or
someone who believes the Earth
was created in six days?
Struensee, who quickly befriends
Christian, does just that, freeing the young king from his passive role by
rehearsing Christian’s daily new proposals and, ultimately, after doing away
with the privy council, taking over the bill-signing himself.
Although Matilda does have a son,
Frederick, with Christian, mostly she is deserted, keep apart in an unfriendly
world where even several of the books she has brought with her from England,
are taken away, having been banned in Denmark.
In a sense Mathilda, of whom Christian continually refers to as
“mother,” and Struensee, who clearly plays the role of a loving and doting
father, are almost destined to their own spousal-like relationship, the later
joining her in bed every night. And at moments, particularly when the troubled
Christian falls into the arms of genial and clearly loving physician, it appears
that the relationship between this trio has become a kind of perverse ménage-a-trois, particularly when,
discovering that she is pregnant with Struensee’s daughter, Mathilda is forced
to encourage Christian to return to her bed as a ruse to hide the fact that her
child is a bastard.
Mathilda is sent away, and her son
Frederick eventually comes to power, an afternote letting us know that he later
restored many of the reformations previously ordered by his father, as imagined
by his physician.
Although, many of the incidents
presented in the movie are fictions, most of them by far occurred in history
itself. And the only truly unbelievable aspect of this film is that the scenes we
are witnessing supposedly consist of a long epistle Mathilda is writing to
explain her actions to her children. As several critics noted, had she actually
written such a letter, it would surely have gotten into the hands of enemies,
and would probably have resulted in the death of her daughter. In history, it
is apparent, that this unhappy young queen kept her silence in painful
isolation, returning to England to become involved with charities.
In the end, we might almost see this
film as a presaging of the liberal, open-minded and economically successful
country that Denmark is today. Perhaps the royalty, after years of
inter-breeding, needs a good dose, now and then, of a county doctor of German
peasant stock. If nothing else, Mathilda, brought an aura of what Christian
describes as “the dramatic” into the oppressive Danish court. It’s too bad that
film did not incorporate the fact that Mathilda, far from being the fragile
beauty as she is here represented, was often attired in men’s clothing and
appeared in formal occasions in riding breeches.
Los Angeles, December 23, 2012




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