A worthy sequel to Elizabeth, though perhaps suffering a bit by coming second. Nonetheless, it doesn’t get any better than this for fans of historical drama, while the performance of Cate Blanchett as the Virgin Queen remains the modern benchmark for acting royally.
Cate Blanchett reprises her role as ‘The Virgin Queen,’ a role she fills inimitably, notwithstanding the other legendary performers who also played the part. Blanchett’s voice, a wonderful instrument, has the ability to drop a register when needed, making her sound very powerful indeed.
Clive Owen, now a bona fide movie star, easily assumes the role of mature, intelligent and dashing privateer-explorer. His Sir Walter Raleigh conveys a brash sense of independence and individualism that marks him as a proto-American, in sharp contrast to the Old World deference to place and position that constrains everyone else in the Elizabethan court.
A masterfully mounted costume drama. As is the case nowadays, not only are the costumes richer than ever, but the production design leaves little to the imagination, the combination of big budgets and digital FX delivering exteriors of Old Londontown, interiors of castles, and flotillas of Spanish Armadas that dazzle the eye.
While I don’t recall the movie using the classic Hollywood weasel words “Inspired by real events”, the Wikipedia Historical Inaccuracies entry makes clear that much circumstantial liberty was taken.