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Queen of Hearts(Dronningen)

✭ ✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

Denmark, Sweden · 2019
2h 7m
Director May el-Toukhy
Starring Trine Dyrholm, Gustav Lindh, Magnus Krepper, Liv Esmår Dannemann
Genre Drama

Anne lives a picture-perfect life as a successful lawyer, wife, and mother of two. But her life is turned upside down when her teenage stepson Gustav comes to live with the family. The pair share an intimate relationship that puts everything Anne has at risk.

Stream Queen of Hearts

What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

80

Screen Daily by Allan Hunter

The result is an intriguing, smartly sustained drama in which we learn to be wary of those who claim the moral high ground.

80

Film Threat by Bradley Gibson

Director May El-Toukhy paints an engaging, uncompromising film in bold strokes, never looking away or shrinking from Anne’s boldness to act on her desires, or her willingness to remorselessly do whatever she must to restore the status quo of her life.

60

The New York Times by Glenn Kenny

When the movie isn’t straining, the go-for-broke performances of Dyrholm and Lindh give it a specific, unusual tension — like the feeling you get when you’ve over-tightened a corkscrew and know the matter around it is about to crumble.

70

Variety by Guy Lodge

In a conversation piece pitched halfway between the delicate Sirkian tragedy and Adrian Lyne at his most sensational, it’s the overridingly controlled nature of proceedings — from performance to production design — that keeps “Queen of Hearts” from sliding into the hysterical silliness that its provocations invite.

80

Los Angeles Times by Robert Abele

The tricky brilliance of Queen of Hearts is in how el-Toukhy uses a well-worn narrative — the unsuspecting, hidden passion with the appearance of erotic freedom — to unveil what in reality is a poisonous tale of abuse.

35

TheWrap by Simon Abrams

Gender inequality may be a potentially complicating factor when it comes to sexual trauma (i.e., men can also be abused by women), but that provocative conceit isn’t considered with much care or intelligence.

70

The Hollywood Reporter by Todd McCarthy

The film maintains its edge because el-Toukhy serves up this unsavory dish cold, without any mollifying humanistic judgments or reassurances that people are actually better than this. The central character is as heartless as any treacherous double-crosser in a film noir, but without the constant stylistic reminder that we live in a nasty, dark, dog-eat-dog world.

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