Spencer
United Kingdom
80823 people rated Diana Spencer, struggling with mental-health problems during her Christmas holidays with the Royal Family at their Sandringham estate in Norfolk, England, decides to end her decade-long marriage to Prince Charles.
Biography
Drama
Cast (18)
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User Reviews
mekdiyee
16/07/2024 09:15
Spencer-720P
Franja du Plessis
16/07/2024 09:15
Spencer-480P
Violet Tumo
29/05/2023 16:13
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ViTich / ڤتيش
29/05/2023 15:51
source: Spencer
di_foreihner
15/02/2023 11:30
This false narrative that these boring poncey films are artistic and deep and portray something meaningful are just as ridiculous as the movies themselves, if anyone watched this and left feeling anything but tortured, bored or insulted then I'd be amazed.
The story was about as boring as staring at a wall, there was nothing here that made me think or appreciate the plight of Diana and I was always sympathetic to her, the monarchy are an outdated poor representation of England with no clue what real people are anymore.
Did it portray mental health well? Or did it just look childish and temper tantrum's but because it's an adult it's deep mental health issues? I dunno, as someone who suffers with MH I didn't see much in this that was at all nuanced or realistic, just cheap and shallow.
The acting is fine, KS was good but what she had to work with was garbage, it's literally a movie that ends in a KFC , it's all just ridiculous. It's always poor rich people, think the world forgets the plight of ordinary folk. Did she have to stay?
Anyway after thousands of movies this is in the bottom 1% it's awful but it'll be pushed as a daring artsy deep masterpiece about someone portraying a national icon, instead of a 2 hour drag about a woman being fed up and going to kfc. It fails to get sympathy and in my view fails at everything.
Also the music is the worst in the history of film, whoever scored this needs a hearing test, it's abysmal, it's so so irritating and fails to set any mood or atmosphere.
Cant honestly stress how bad this is, I get some highbrow films but trying to pass this off as anything other than an awful movie is people desperate to look intelligent.
Toni Tones
15/02/2023 11:30
Mostly disagree with critics: this is technically very good but, as a film, just meh. The film is artsy, which usually means a 50/50 situation to me: very good or very painful and pretentious. This is a bit on the middle. There is a very strong and powerful scene around 40 minutes - and it's an hallucination...- but it's a shame that, after that, this turned to be much less interesting and repetitive until we have Diana visiting her old house (definitely, the highlight of the film, technically and emotionally). It's ok for some time, some meaningful - and totally predictable - conversations, with, unfortunately, no subtlety at all. It has an interesting score and is well directed, but...it should be so much more than these two hours of the same. Can anyone tell me that this would be any different if it was a 60 minutes film? There is no arc, there is no grow, nothing new, the characters end exactly like they started, most - except Diana and Maggie played very well by Sally Hawkins - totally unidimensional, like MCU villains. I liked the suffocating elements that we saw before in films like Birdman or Shiva Baby, but I think the tone is an issue here, as we keep the same and the same mood for the entire 2 hours (except the KFC trip).
Even more surprisingly, I don't think KStew performance is really Oscar worthy (but she will probably win). Don't get me wrong: she does a good job. I just think I would enjoy it much more if I didn't know the real Diana. I never, never, never saw Diana here. I always saw Stewart trying to act like Diana. Some of the things she does are obviously very well taken from Diana - like inclining her head to the side when she speaks or some eye movements - as expected, she can also play very well with what is emotionally requested (even if not as convincing as Jessica Chastain or Tessa Thompson in other films this year, I felt more like someone acting than a real person here). I just didn't feel her character that close to the real Diana, with some clear exaggerations (why always whispering? Diana had a sweet and calm voice but she was not whispering all the time...also forget that "perfect accent" that some are talking about).
In short, I think this is as good as weak: there are beautiful technical elements, Stewart acting is strong (even if it worked much better if it was about a fictional character), you can feel the tension and anxiety growing up, but...I can't avoid to think of this as an Oscar-bait (not in the way of appealing to mainstream audiences, but critics and connoisseurs - who play a big part nowadays) and disappointing, as it thinks it has a lot to say but it just keeps playing with the same elements over and over again, being completely one-note, repetitive and even patronising (do we really need all that expository dialogue to explain the same over and over again?).
TWICE
15/02/2023 11:30
Such a let down, the film has the cast, sets and budget to really document a recent period of history that had the whole country captivated but wastes it all making an awful arty type film. Also so much of the film would just not have happened in real life, is not even a slight exaggeration, it's just plain ridiculous.
As for the annoying mood music that is played over and over during the film, it is probably the closest I have ever been to walking out of a film just because of irritating music. The film would have been a lot better if they just hadn't used it!
A decent film on this subject matter could have been a real hit, let's hope for the future.
S P E N C E R
15/02/2023 11:30
From the very first words on screen ('A fable from a true tragedy'), Spencer announces that it will not be a typical biography and keeps its word. It's a mix of thriller and artistic horror that uses Diana's true story to depict something more. Pablo Larraín achieves this effect with the excellent use of space (narrow corridors and tight rooms filmed in a way to emphasize the claustrophobic impression) and by giving the whole movie a surreal atmosphere - dream is mixed with reality, reality with delusion. The cast help with building an eerie atmosphere, especially the fantastic Timothy Spall, in the role of Major Gregory, who moves through the Windsor mansion almost like a ghost. The key theme of the film is the clash of two worlds - the royal family and its suffocating traditions, with the lonely Diana, who desperately tries not to surrender to them, to escape the deadly stagnation of the past, towards freedom and finding herself. The real star here, however, is, as always excellent, Kristen Stewart. Not everyone believed that she would be able to play an icon like Diana, but she did it flawlessly. She captured her essence, replenishing it with own energy, which helped creat a flesh-and-blood figure, not a cheap imitation. Stewart perfectly shows the complexity of her character - the fragile mental stability (she's talking with a ghost and jacket), mood changes, spontaneity suppressed by the royal family, but also energy, rebellion and motherly love for children. Claire Mathon follows her everywhere, chasing Diana through corridors, lawns, empty rooms and an abandoned houses. There are also close-ups characteristic of this cinematographer, and the whole picture is beautifully complemented by Johnny Greenwood's music. But what impresses most is Stewart absolute authenticity, the spontaneity that emanates from her especially during scenes with her sons or sequences on the beach. This skill brings life into a shackled Diana and creates a role worthy of all praise that she collects.
QuinNellow
15/02/2023 11:30
I saw "Spencer", starring Kristen Stewart-Charlie's Angels_2019, Panic Room; Jack Farthing-Poldark_tv, Blandings_tv; Sean Harris-The Green Knight, Serena and Sally Hawkins-The Shape of Water, Layer Cake.
This is a movie that is based on true incidences surrounding the life of England's Princess Diana-Spencer was her maiden name. Kristen plays the troubled Diana-in a very good portrayal-who was having mental health issues during her marriage to Prince Charles, played by Jack. As she was contemplating the end of her marriage to Jack, Kristen struggled with bulimia, her fame with the English paparazzi and even her place in the Royal family and all the structured rules that she had to follow. Sean plays the royal chef and Sally is Diana's personal servant that-at least according to this movie-had stronger feelings for Diana than anyone knew. Some parts of the movie were almost interesting-scenes with her kids-but overall, it was just boring. I'm pretty sure that the Royal family will not be too happy with some of the portrayals here. Even my wife-who is a big fan of Princess Diana-kept looking at the time and saying that she wished it would be over soon.
It's rated "R" for language and sexual content-including some partial nudity-and has a running time of 1 hour & 57 minutes.
It's not one that I would buy on DVD. I wouldn't rent it either but if you really want to see it, I'd wait until it comes to tv.
JAWHARI 🪡🪡
15/02/2023 11:30
This film is garbage, it'll get mistakenly called artsy and daring and showcasing mental health so it'll doubtful avoid much public criticism but as an entertainment piece it is utter rubbish.
If true I guess it's sad but it's just another reason that the monarchy are an outdated pointless presence who just enforce that silly posh stereotype and are out of touch with real people. Diana felt like a real person and look what it did to her, I mean the only press they seem to get these days is negative. The only royal with an ounce of real in them left aswell.
It's slow, painfully slow, the acting whilst not bad is just idiotic because of whispering and childish dialogue, I thought I'd feel sorry for Diana as that was always my gut thing but this just made me dislike her, I disliked the others more but just found her to be incredibly petulant and childish rather than mentally unwell.
It's not a pleasing ending, it's not a film that ever needs revisiting, it must be awful to be will or Harry and see their family shown in such a way. It's just all round a waste of time and money and does nothing of any good.
After thousands of films of every genre I'd easily put this in the lowest 1%. There is nothing remotely salvageable from this wreck of a movie.