During her Christmas holidays with the royal family at the Sandringham estate in Norfolk, England, Diana decides to leave her marriage to Prince Charles.
Kristen Stewart
Diana
Timothy Spall
Major Alistair Gregorys
Jack Nielen
William
Freddie Spry
Harry
Jack Farthing
Charles
Sean Harris
Darren
Stella Gonet
The Queen
Richard Sammel
Prince Philip
Elizabeth Berrington
Princess Anne
Lore Stefanek
Queen Mother
Amy Manson
Anne Boleyn
Sally Hawkins
Maggie
James Harkness
Footman Paul
Laura Benson
Angela (Dresser)
Wendy Patterson
Maria (Older Maid)
Libby Rodliffe
Pamela (Maid)
John Keogh
Michael (Charles' Valet)
Marianne Graffam
Barbara (Nanny)
Ben Plunkett-Reynolds
Footman Brian
Ryan Wichert
Staff Sergeant Wood
Michael Epp
Lance Corporal Jacobs
Tom Hudson
Police Constable Thomas
James Gerard
Police Constable Field
Thomas Douglas
John Spencer
Ian Ashpitel
Vicar
Emma Darwall Smith
Camilla Parker Bowles
Kimia Schmidt
Diana (9 Years)
Greta Bücker
Diana (Late Teenage Years)
Henry Castello
Charles Spencer (9 Years)
Christin Schreiber
Alter Ego Diana
Camille Loup Moltzen
Boy (Roadhouse Cafe)
Mudassar Dar
KFC Employee
Niklas Kohrt
Prince Andrew
Peter Lee
Church Organist
Olga Hellsing
Sarah Ferguson (uncredited)
Matthias Wolkowski
Prince Edward (uncredited)
Oriana Gordon
Lady Sarah Chatto (uncredited)
Sami Amber
Boy (Roadhouse Cafe) (uncredited)
Director
Pablo Larraín
Writer
Steven Knight
November 5, 2021
6
I knew absolutely nothing about this movie beforehand. I heard/read extraordinarily positive reactions that definitely elevated my expectations. And my actual knowledge about Princess Diana and her life was and still is extremely basic. Spencer is one of those rare examples where going into it completely blind didn't work in my favor at all. I found myself trying to look for something to grab on to, and despite some genuinely outstanding technical attributes, Steven Knight's (Locked Down) screenplay doesn't offer me enough to hold my attention.
Spencer is undoubtedly a fictional character piece that only stands on its feet due to one of the year's most mesmerizing lead performances. Kristen Stewart (Underwater), an actress who still gets a lot of unfair hate despite her clear evolution to one of the most underrated actors working today, delivers a career-defining portrayal of Princess Diana that viewers will hardly forget about. I can't recall the last time I witnessed an actor completely disappearing into their role. A true masterclass worthy of every single award. The rest of the cast is also superb.
Technically, I also have little to complain about. Pablo Larraín's (Jackie) distinct direction adequately fits the frustrating, claustrophobic story, and I love how Claire Mathon's (Portrait of a Lady on Fire) moves between the intimate close-ups and gorgeous wide shots. As expected, costume and production design look fabulous, but Jonny Greenwood's (You Were Never Really Here) score didn't work for me. The mix of jazz with high-tension sequences becomes too uncanny, distracting the viewers from the narrative, which leads me to my main issue.
For someone with my knowledge and expectations, Spencer becomes one of those "nothing happens" films that usually surprises viewers with its unique storytelling approach. I'm all-in for this type of work, but outside of Stewart's display, I struggled to feel captivated by whatever was going on. A supposedly consistently interesting character study transformed into an overlong, repetitive one-woman show, where I couldn't figure out what it was aiming for. I understand the purpose of making the audience feel how Diana felt during her marriage and living within British Royalty, but Larraín's execution somehow fails to leave me emotionally satisfied.
A second viewing will probably improve and strengthen my opinion about the movie. For now, I feel very mixed about Spencer, but I'll leave this as a positive review trusting that I'll gradually enjoy it more after each viewing.
Rating: B-