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Queen Christina (film)

Queen Christina
Queen Christina (film):QueenChrisPoster
Directed by Rouben Mamoulian
Produced by Walter Wanger
Written by S.N. Behrman
H.M. Harwood
Starring Greta Garbo
John Gilbert
Music by Herbert Stothart
Release date(s) December 261933
Running time 97 min.
Language English
IMDb profile

Queen Christina is a 1933 Pre-Code Hollywood feature film, starring Greta Garbo and John Gilbert. The film was directed by Rouben Mamoulian, and the screenwriters were Viertel LeVino and Margaret "Peg" LeVino, with dialogue credit given to S. N. Behrman. It was adapted from Faith Compton's Sybil of the North. This highly fictionalized feature film was based on the life of the 17th century Queen Christina of Sweden. It was billed as Garbo's return to cinema after an eighteen-month hiatus.

One could imagine why Garbo would be intrigued by this project. She was given the opportunity to play a queen from her homeland of Sweden. And as such, Garbo was in total control of Queen Christina. She chose the director, cameraman, and cast. One of the screenwriters, Salka Viertel, was a personal friend. She had initially requested that Sir Laurence Olivier play the part of Christina's lover, since she was impressed with him in a previous film. But during rehearsals in August 1933, Garbo and Olivier did not have any chemistry. Instead, Garbo requested that Gilbert (who was once her fiancé) get the part.

Queen Christina (film):End scene screenshot
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End scene screenshot

In the feature film, Garbo's Christina is made to abdicate her throne for the love of a Spanish ambassador, Don Antonio, played by Gilbert. There is also no mention of the real Christina's conversion to Catholicism. The conclusion of Queen Christina contains one of the most famous shots in the history of feature film. In a long, silent tracking shot which moves into a close-up, Garbo is standing on the brow of a ship, gazing out at the horizon. It has been interpreted in many different ways, mostly due to Garbo's own ambiguity as an actress. According to the director, he told Garbo to think of absolutely nothing, to have her face be a mask, and never to blink in order to create this final shot.

Fairly or unfairly, this film was snubbed at Oscar time, and it did not do that well at the box office either despite good reviews from critics. Many consider Garbo's performance in Queen Christina to be among her best.


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1933 films | English-language films | Black and white films

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