Popularity: 1 (history)
Director: | Stephen Frears |
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Writer: | Shrabani Basu, Lee Hall |
Staring: |
Queen Victoria strikes up an unlikely friendship with a young Indian clerk named Abdul Karim. | |
Release Date: | Sep 13, 2017 |
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Director: | Stephen Frears |
Writer: | Shrabani Basu, Lee Hall |
Genres: | Drama, History |
Keywords | based on novel or book, biography, based on true story, 19th century, british monarchy |
Production Companies | BBC Film, India Take One, Focus Features, Working Title Films, Perfect World Pictures, Cross Street Films |
Box Office |
Revenue: $65,400,000
Budget: $22,000,000 |
Updates |
Updated: Feb 01, 2025 (Update) Entered: Apr 13, 2024 |
Name | Character |
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Judi Dench | Queen Victoria |
Ali Fazal | Abdul Karim |
Tim Pigott-Smith | Sir Henry Ponsonby |
Eddie Izzard | Bertie, Prince of Wales |
Adeel Akhtar | Mohammed |
Michael Gambon | Lord Salisbury |
Paul Higgins | Dr. James Reid |
Olivia Williams | Baroness Churchill |
Fenella Woolgar | Miss Phipps |
Julian Wadham | Alick Yorke |
Jonathan Harden | Kaiser Wilhelm II |
Robin Soans | Arthur Bigge |
Ruth McCabe | Mrs. Tuck |
Simon Callow | Mr. Puccini |
Benjamin Haigh | Page Boy |
Will Christopherson | Young Porter Boy |
Martyn Mayger | Yeoman of the Guard |
Deano Bugatti | Queen Victoria's Waiter |
Penny Ryder | Grand Duchess Sophie |
Christopher McMullen | Footman |
Rita McDonald Damper | Ham House Guest |
Sukh Ojla | Mrs. Karim |
Grant Crookes | Footman |
Shaun Newnham | Royal Household Staff |
Nigel Black | Private Secretary |
Sophie Trott | Princess Helena |
Andrei Csolsim | Footman |
Glyn Angell | Young Chef |
Lois Temel | Nurse |
Marek Hollands | Footman |
Nicolas Savidis-Macris | Italian Dinner Guest |
Simon Craddock | Footman |
Tim Bristow | Deputy Parliamentary Secretary |
Cliff Dutton | Footman |
Martin McGilligan | Footman |
Benjamin Murrell | Footman |
Daniel Trevenna | Footman |
Stuart Whelan | Chef (uncredited) |
Sam Kenyon | Puccini Pianist |
Name | Job |
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Stephen Frears | Director |
Daniel Phillips | Hair Designer, Makeup Designer |
Andrea Cracknell | Hairstylist, Makeup Artist |
Tapio Salmi | Makeup Artist |
Ray Marston | Wigmaker |
Paul Stewart | Property Master |
Iain Mackay | Steadicam Operator |
Paul McGeachan | Gaffer |
Terry Robb | Electrician |
Alex Mott | Key Grip |
Alan MacDonald | Production Design, In Memory Of |
Adam Squires | Art Direction |
Loulia Sheppard | Hair Designer |
Beverley Binda | Makeup Artist |
Adam James Phillips | Makeup Artist |
Amie Wilson | Makeup Artist |
Choi Ho Man | Supervising Art Director |
Peter Keith | Drone Operator |
Peter Mountain | Still Photographer |
Will Kendal | Rigging Gaffer |
Simon Tanner | Electrician |
Nandini Shrikent | Casting |
Sanjeev Maurya | Casting Associate |
Yash Mehta | Casting Assistant |
Sue Hills | Script Supervisor |
Luca Zappala | CG Supervisor |
Edd Gamlin | Visual Effects Editor |
Noga Alon Stein | Visual Effects Producer |
Sue Harding | Foley |
Dafydd Archard | Sound Re-Recording Mixer |
Phil Lee | Sound Effects Editor |
Maria Chamberlain | Digital Intermediate |
Rob Farris | Digital Intermediate |
Shaun Richards | Digital Intermediate |
Jeanna Mortimer | First Assistant Editor |
Shrabani Basu | Book |
Lissy Holm | Casting |
Samantha Knox-Johnston | Unit Production Manager |
Rakesh Singh | Unit Production Manager |
Olivia Lloyd | Second Assistant Director |
Deborah Saban | First Assistant Director |
Krishan Pratap Singh | Second Assistant Director |
Alison Clements | Draughtsman |
Darren Lyttle | Assistant Property Master |
Dan Marsden | Construction Manager |
Mark Stevenson-Ellis | Assistant Set Decoration |
Julian Spencer | Stunt Coordinator |
Garry Hedges | Lighting Technician |
Bobbie Edwards | Costume Coordinator |
Rosie Grant | Assistant Costume Designer |
Marion Weise | Costume Supervisor |
Gerard McCann | Music Editor |
Ankita Batra | Production Coordinator |
Lois Gration | Production Secretary |
Lawrence Mason | Production Coordinator |
Karan Mally | Casting Associate |
Raj Bhansali | Casting Assistant |
Jim Dines | Marine Coordinator |
Chris Reynolds | Special Effects Supervisor |
Paul O'Hara | Visual Effects Coordinator |
Adam Gascoyne | Visual Effects Supervisor |
Kate Morath | Boom Operator |
Hugo Adams | Foley Editor |
Mike Dowson | Sound Re-Recording Mixer |
Becki Ponting | Supervising Sound Editor |
Karolina Dziwinska | Digital Intermediate |
Lawrence Hook | Digital Intermediate |
Melanie Oliver | Editor |
Ian Wilson | Supervising Sound Editor |
Leo Davis | Casting |
Tania Blunden | Post Production Supervisor |
Pranav Sahni | Production Manager |
Gouri Dutt | Second Second Assistant Director |
Jayant Rao | Third Assistant Director |
Mohit Silswal | Third Assistant Director |
Amar Vaswani | Assistant Director |
Constantine Katsaras | Draughtsman |
Jonathan Maris | Storyboard Artist |
Chris Rosser | Graphic Designer |
Sam Stefan | Stunts |
Johanna Garrad | Assistant Costume Designer |
Riyaz Ali Merchant | Wardrobe Supervisor |
Ryan Colligan | Assistant Editor |
Jami Chan | Production Coordinator |
Sheerin Khosrowshahi-Miandoab | Assistant Production Coordinator |
Julian Murray | Production Accountant |
Lee Hall | Screenplay |
Danny Cohen | Director of Photography |
Sarah Finlay | Art Direction |
Consolata Boyle | Costume Design |
Matt Curtis | Title Designer |
Patrick Malone | Digital Intermediate |
Adam Mendez | Foley Mixer |
Jake Polonsky | Second Unit Director of Photography |
J.A.C. Redford | Orchestrator |
Tim Pigott-Smith | In Memory Of |
Thomas Newman | Original Music Composer |
Lee Sharp | Boom Operator |
Jen Annor | Assistant Sound Engineer |
Name | Title |
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Tracey Seaward | Producer |
Tim Bevan | Producer |
Eric Fellner | Producer |
Beeban Kidron | Producer |
Organization | Category | Person |
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Popularity History
Year | Month | Avg | Max | Min |
---|---|---|---|---|
2024 | 4 | 23 | 40 | 13 |
2024 | 5 | 27 | 57 | 14 |
2024 | 6 | 21 | 41 | 12 |
2024 | 7 | 20 | 34 | 12 |
2024 | 8 | 19 | 36 | 11 |
2024 | 9 | 11 | 14 | 8 |
2024 | 10 | 16 | 38 | 7 |
2024 | 11 | 16 | 53 | 6 |
2024 | 12 | 11 | 17 | 6 |
2025 | 1 | 15 | 32 | 9 |
2025 | 2 | 8 | 13 | 3 |
2025 | 3 | 5 | 12 | 1 |
2025 | 4 | 2 | 6 | 1 |
2025 | 5 | 1 | 6 | 1 |
2025 | 6 | 1 | 3 | 1 |
2025 | 7 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
2025 | 8 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
Trending Position
I wouldn't say this is a memorable historical film, but it was interesting and entertaining enough to hold my attention. I researched the background a little bit, and I am not sure why they made some of their changes to how the unlikely friendship actually transpired. I assume it was to simplify the ... story. And as it happens, It is surprising that the story has gotten told at all. Apparently extreme measures undertaken by the royals after to obliterate any record of the unlikely friendship after Queen Victoria's death. anyone who has read about the history of British monarchs will recognize this attempt to control the narrative of the royals as they guard the parameters of the succession. But it is worth a watch regardless about exactly how accurate the details are. History is written by the ones in control, and this is a cool exception.
**A good movie, on almost every level.** I really like films with a historical background or those linked to the monarchy, which has a lot to do with my personal life, my birth family and also with my work as historian. I was very curious about this movie, and today I finally got to see it. And I ... can say that it was really good. I can't say that everything is fine, there are several scenes and moments that seem too imaginative to have actually happened, but the overall picture is quite positive. The relationship between the mighty Queen Victoria and this personal servant of hers was surely the subject of harsh criticism and enormous misunderstanding. The British court was then, like most of Europe, deeply prejudiced, racist and Eurocentric. There was really a belief that Europe was civilization and that the colonizing and imperialist efforts of the European powers would take some of that civilization to a barbaric world, with strange customs, lacking in Christian religion, education, manners, modern infrastructures that only white Europeans could manage. This was the British stance in India, and elsewhere in its empire. For us this may be shocking, and we have seen a wave of destruction of statues and monuments linked to the European colonial past because of this general feeling of shock and repudiation… but history will not disappear just because we sweep it under the rug. It is with the teachings of history, inside and outside the classroom, that we learn, and erasing the visible traces of a past that offends us (or that offends other peoples) is useless. I think we shouldn't be ashamed of having been empires, and of having been present in other countries, or having dominated other peoples. For better or worse, this marked both sides (dominators and dominated), and the cultural exchanges that took place helped shape the countries and peoples we know today. I think it is much more productive to learn from all this: to learn not to make the same mistakes, and on the other hand, to make the best use of the bridges and links that this common past has established between different nations from several parts of the world. Sorry for the rant, but I think it comes in handy. As the respectable reader has already noticed, the film explores the relationship between two very different people: the queen of the greatest empire of her time and a humble clerk who happened to serve her, becoming one of her favorites and shocking the racist and futile court. Much of what we know of this connection has been lost because the letters and documents were overwhelmingly burned after Victoria's death, but I think the film really captured the essence of what happened there. Judi Dench is a great actress, who curiously has already given life to Victoria in an older film, and is perfectly suited for the role and manages to establish a very positive chemistry with Ali Fazal, who is charismatic, friendly and captures our interest and our affinity. There are several characters in the film that seem sketchy and uninteresting, and most royal court figures fall into this group. I liked, however, the performance of Michael Gambon, Tim Piggot Smith and Eddie Izzard. The end of the film is particularly touching. On a technical level, I have to highlight the judicious and intelligent choice of filming locations, in particular Osborne House, a former royal residence closely linked to the monarch. The film uses that footage well, captures color and light very well, and builds an elegant, warm cinematography that's pleasing to the eye and very engaging. Being a period film, an extra effort was put into the sets and costumes, and I can say that I haven't noticed any major errors or problems here. The biggest criticism I can make is the difficulty I felt in understanding the passage of time: it would be difficult, for someone who didn't know the story well, to say if the action of the film takes place in the course of just a few days or the course of several years. Also, the score by Thomas Newman, written for the film, turned out to be excellent.