Chicago Sun-Times

Dench again rules as Victoria, but story shortchang­es her pal

- BY BILL GOODYKOONT­Z

WUSA TODAY Network ho better than Judi Dench portray Queen Victoria, to embody an iconic ruler with earthiness and spunk, even well into her dotage? She’s played Victoria before, after all, in 1997’ s “Mrs. Brown.”

She returns to the role, and how, in “Victoria and Abdul,” based on the true story of Victoria’s late- in- life friendship with Abdul Karim ( Ali Fazal), an Indian Muslim. Their relationsh­ip bedevils the royal court, a side effect the queen especially seems to enjoy.

It’s a fascinatin­g story with particular contempora­ry relevance.

And it should be better. Director Stephen Frears showcases Dench, and she is, simply, great. But he and writer Lee Hall shortchang­e Abdul, making him not a caricature, but more of an outline of a character. It’s clear from the soft- focus treatment of the script that there’s a meatier story here, one we leave hungry for.

Abdul is a clerk in Agra when the movie begins, chosen nearly at random ( mostly he’s tall enough) to take a coin minted in India in the queen’s honor and present it to her in England.

This is to occur at a royal luncheon, which Frears plays for comedy and mostly succeeds. Everything revolves around the queen. When she sits, everyone sits. When she slurps her soup like a hungry glutton and finishes it almost before everyone else is served, off goes everyone’s soup.

Abdul ignores the rules, going so far as to kiss the queen’s foot, to everyone’s horror.

Everyone except the queen. She loves the attention, and thus begins an unlikely platonic relationsh­ip in which Abdul teaches her much about India, one of her colonies but one about which she knows nearly nothing.

Dench plays Victoria as voraciousl­y curious. She even learns

‘ VICTORIA AND ABDUL’ 1/ 2

Focus Features presents a film directed by Stephen Frears and written by Lee Hall, based on the book by Shrabani Basu. Rated PG- 13 ( for some thematic elements and language). Running time: 112 minutes. Opens Friday at local theaters. to read and write in Urdu.

Imagine how that goes over. The servants and court are horrified, especially Bertie ( Eddie Izzard), the Prince of Wales, next in line for the throne and impatient to get there, and Lord Salisbury ( Michael Gambon). Bertie helps launch a kind of smear campaign against Abdul.

The bigotry and racism is appalling, of course, and sadly easier to imagine than ever. Victoria rises above it, taking great delight in antagonizi­ng her underlings ( at least until a kind of palace coup is attempted, and we see the steely side of the queen, a most- welcome occurrence.)

But she also genuinely likes Abdul’s company. While he certainly treats the queen with respect, he does not constantly genuflect before her. Instead he treats her like a person — a person of unimaginab­le power and station, to be sure. But a person nonetheles­s. And it is clear that she is starved for just such treatment.

 ??  ?? In “Victoria and Abdul,” the queen ( Judi Dench) befriends a visiting Muslim from India ( Ali Fazal).
| FOCUS FEATURES
In “Victoria and Abdul,” the queen ( Judi Dench) befriends a visiting Muslim from India ( Ali Fazal). | FOCUS FEATURES

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