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selenak: (Young Elizabeth by Misbegotten)
[personal profile] selenak
There are still some free slots in my January meme, so if you want me to ramble on about the topic of your choice, ask me there.

I watched Glass Onion on Netflix which is indeed that rarity, a sequel of equal quality. All the actors are clearly having a blast, and yet it doesn't feel self indulgent, not least because in addition to Rian Johnson's (gleeful) anger at the super rich, there is, as in Knives Out, also a character to root for. (In addition to Blanc, that is, and in a way emotionally affecting that Blanc, in the detective role, can't be.) Here is an interesting interview with Johnson about this - spoilerly for Knives Out, but not Glass Onion -, though my favourite passage is this (which refers to a bit of dialogue that comes after Birdie, the Kate Hudson character, has prided herself on being a telling-it-like-it-is type:

Sims: The best line in the movie is Benoit saying to Kate Hudson’s character [a fashion designer named Birdie], “It’s a dangerous thing to mistake speaking without thought for speaking the truth,” and her replying, “Are you calling me dangerous?” You’re illustrating the voice that certain people present to society.

Johnson: The whole movie, for me, is a bit of a primal scream against the carnival-like idiocy of the past six years.


I hear you, Rian.

I also read The Perilous Gard by Elizabeth Marie Pope which was one of [personal profile] cahn's Christmas presents, and found it charming and engaging. The fairies manage to be genuinely other, which is always a plus in my book, and Kate was an excellent heroine. The relationship between her and her main antagonist eventually develops in the best kind of worthy opponent respect against the odds. If anything feels dated, it's the framing of late in Mary Tudor's reign, where (off page) Mary is just a meanie; one has the impression less for her religious policies and more because she supposedly makes sister Elizabeth live at Hatfield because it's the most unpleasant and coldest of Royal palaces. (Never mind the fact Elizabeth as a baby and toddler was put there already by her parents when her mother was still alive and Queen and that Mary was part of her household then.) After more recent takes on Mary I. which were far more interesting and more dimensional - for example, The Tudors had its myriad of faults, but its take on young Mary was one of its undisputed highlights, and Becoming Elizabeth has a very compelling, smart and heroic Mary while also showing the seeds of what's to come - it feels weird to go back to Cinderella!Elizabeth and Evil Stepsister!Mary. But this really is just early in the book to get the plot going, as our heroine Kate is banished by (mean) Mary to the titular location, and so it doesn't impact on the overall quality of the novel. (One last Tudor nitpick: when Kate finds out about pagan human sacrifice by burning, she reacts as one would, but I kept waiting for someone to bring up that if this is late in Mary I's reign, and Kate was a member of Elizabeth's household (thus presumably Protestant), Kate actually should firstly be aware of some present day Christian-on-Christian burnings, and secondly, if she remembers her childhood, be aware that there were also burnings ordered by Protestant Edward and Doing-His-Own-Thing Henry VIIII. (Meaning: executing another human being by fire should not be news to anyone living in the reign of a Tudor. Doesn't mean Kate can't be shocked. But not in the 20th century kind of way.)

Lastly, I'm continuing wiht the History of Byzantium podcast and am now around ca. 925 AD. Talk about violent regime changes. (Not just on the Byzantine side. The Abbasid Kaliphate is falling apart simultanously.) Iconoclasm is over and done with, and now I'm curious what the next big theological dispute will be - the great schism, I suppose?

Date: 2022-12-31 06:53 am (UTC)
cahn: (Default)
From: [personal profile] cahn
Ahhhhh this is great, thank you!

or for that matter Catholic (!) Cousin Mary Queen of Scots her successor

Ohh, right! I do remember from Game of Queens that Mary Queen of Scots was sort of a walking disaster, but to have even that trump the Catholicism...

(In)famously, one of the nobleman Henry sends to his oldest daughter to make that clear tells Mary that if she was his daughter, he'd smash her head to the wall "like a boiled apple" for her disobedience. (In fiction, this man is invariably the Duke of Norfolk, since he was one of the men and was just the kind of jerk to say something like this, but in truth we don't know which one said it. Just that it was said, courtesy of Thomas Cromwell receiving a report of it.) This is when Mary caves, which she'll never forgive herself for, and acknowledges her father's supremacy.

Oh nooooo :( (And, he's her dad :( )

and her attempt to turn it all back to how it was when she was a child so that she saves her subject's souls and redeems her own moment of weakness (as she sees it) can't be done without using more and more violence.

Ah, right -- I knew some of this but not about that "moment of weakness," which just makes everything worse :(

When she dies, she knows that her attempt to make England Catholic again has failed, as Elizabeth sure as hell won't continue in this vein, her marriage has failed, and the people have gone from loving and supporting her to hating her.

Oh no! :(

But it's very easy to imagine Mary, if just a few things in her life had turned out differently, or she had lived in a previous century, becoming a beloved Queen instead of a reviled one.

What are the few things you have in mind?

And thanks for the vids - the one about the Mary & Elizabeth relationship was especially moving.

Date: 2023-01-01 05:03 am (UTC)
cahn: (Default)
From: [personal profile] cahn
Yeah :( and plus which there's all that filial piety stuff that we see with e.g. Wilhelmine that has got to be rearing its head here too -- I mean, she owes it to her mom, too, of course, but also to her dad :( It seems awful and like FW not just in the FW-alone sense but also in the mother-father battles and absolute inability to do what both of them would want (although as far as I know Katherine of Aragorn was a rather nicer mother than SD). Poor Fritz and poor Mary!

Margaret Pole, George's daughter! I have heard of her from the notes to The Dragon Waiting! (It's really true, all my history knowledge comes from historical fic and salon.) But since I only knew of the George connection I didn't know about the Mary connection at all. Also, I am Not Pleased about her execution :( (I suppose if I had my way, if people had to be executed it would all be instantaneous. Then again, you go too far in that direction and I suppose you get the Terror.)

Oh, all those AUs for Mary sound lovely and like they have distinct potential to have been rather better than what she actually got <3

As long as said part would not have been the Netherlands

Okay, I did snort at that :P :D Point taken.

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