52 Films by Women Vol 5. 48. QUEEN OF HEARTS (Dronningen) (Director: May el-Toukhy)
Again: what sort of woman sleeps with both a man and his teenage son in the same house? In her second feature, Queen of Hearts (Dronningen) co-written by Maren Louise Kaehne, Egyptian-Danish writer-director May el-Toukhy addresses the same question as Eliza Petkova’s film, A Fish Swimming Upside Down with a near identical outcome.
Here though the woman in question, Anne (Trine Dyrholm in a
fearsomely committed central performance) is a successful lawyer who
specialises in defending children. By her own admission, Anne doesn’t have any
friends. Her father has died. She doesn’t visit her mother. She is however
close to her sister, Lina (Stine Gyldenkerne) who varnishes Anne’s nails and is
separated from the father of her young mixed-race son, Lucas (Noel Bouhon
Kiertzner).
Anne and her doctor husband, Peter (Magnus Krepper) have
twin daughters, Frida and Fanny (twin sisters Liv and Silja Esmår
Dannemann). Their family expands when Peter brings his teenage son, Gustav
(Gustav Lindh) to live with them. Gustav is troubled. His Swedish mother,
Rebecca, whom we never meet, has run out of patience with him. However, Frida
and Fanny are super-excited. Flanking him wearing the same striped top, they
present him with a heart-shaped wooden key ring that they have made themselves
(one of the film’s heart motifs). Gustav isn’t grateful, discarding it at the
earliest opportunity. There is a break in at the house. Jewellery is missing. Anne
makes a discovery (concerning the key ring) that leads her to conclude that
Gustav staged the break in. She gives him the chance to start over.
There is an alternative: send Gustav to boarding school.
Peter is keen to avoid this. He had not seen his son grow up and does not
really know him. After their conversation, Anne notices a change in Gustav. He
brings back a girl, Amanda (Carla Philip Røder). After a brief
introduction, Gustav takes her to his room. As Anne sits downstairs, trying to
work, she hears the young pair getting intimate. She pours herself another
glass of wine and is distracted by the moaning. Later in her room, she poses in
her blue negligee and considers her own attractiveness. Middle aged, yes, but
with a flat stomach – she pulls up her negligee to contemplate her belly
button. Anne is equally changed.
Anne’s marriage is affected by her work. In an early scene,
Peter complains that there is a stranger in the bathroom. It is one of Anne’s
clients, a young girl subjected to a sexual attack. Anne is preparing her for
her court appearance. ‘You won’t be able
to do that when Gustav comes,’ he moans, adding, ‘Just once, I’d like you to
say, yes, Peter. I understand, Peter.’ ‘Yes, Peter. I understand, Peter,’ Anne
replies, mimicking him. Peter sighs.
Anne explains to the girl that the prosecution will allege
that she is promiscuous. ‘How many men have you slept with? Five? Ten?’ The
girl admits to sleeping with seven men. ‘Is that too many?’ she asks. ‘You’ll
do fine in court,’ Anne assures her. At court, the girl has last minute nerves
about testifying. ‘He may do this to other girls. You don’t want to be the one
who could have stopped him but didn’t,’ Anne tells her. Nevertheless, the
defendant is acquitted. Walking to her car, she sees him laughing and confronts
him. In her office the next day, she is told that he has filed a complaint. Her
(male) partner isn’t worried about the fine, more her reputation. ‘You knew
what I was like when we started this firm,’ Anne explains, standing her ground.
She is not one for admitting her mistakes.
Anne wears her heart on her sleeve, so to speak, and reads
to her young twin daughters, ‘Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland’, which features
the eponymous Queen of Hearts. She over-compensates. During a dinner party out
on the veranda, Anne changes the music. As the song ‘Tainted Love’ by Soft Cell
plays, she dances around the table until she reaches Peter and tries to pull
him to his feet. He smiles at her and holds her arm but resists joining in the
dance. Sulking, Anne sits with her glass of wine under the veranda. Gustav
joins her. He isn’t interested in meeting the people upstairs. Instead he
invites Anne to join him in a trip to buy cigarettes. ‘It will be fun,’ he
explains.
The pair end up in a bar. Anne asks about Amanda. Does
Gustav like her? Gustav is non-committal and smiles instead. He thanks Anne for
the drink. When Anne returns Peter is clearing glasses on the veranda. He is
furious with her for walking out on their guests. Anne doesn’t make a point of
it, but they were his guests. Peter complains that she is rude and
disrespectful and asks where she had gone. Anne doesn’t tell him about her
drink with Gustav. He stops clearing the table and leaves Anne to do it instead.
It is after this argument, during one of Gustav’s trips
away, that Anne transgresses. She enters Gustav’s room while he is in bed and
offers herself to him. Gustav accepts.
From then on, there are frequent trysts – the film is
explicit. Gustav starts acting as a big brother, reading to the twins – they
enjoy this immensely. Anne buys Gustav a computer, much to the annoyance of
Peter, who wanted to share the purchase – to do something for his son. ‘Do you
want to be present when I feed Gustav and wash his clothes?’ Anne asks. Peter
concedes the point.
However, at the twins’ fifth birthday party, Gustav goes too
far. He kisses Anne intimately. ‘Not here,’ he says. However, it is too late:
Lina has seen them. She leaves soon afterwards, shocked and angry. As she says
later, ‘he’s a child’. Anne is unable to explain herself. Then Lina rings
Peter. Anne has no idea what was said. Peter decides to take Gustav with him to
the cabin, where the family frequently spend their vacation. The twins want to
come. ‘What will they do?’ one of them asks. ‘Chopping wood and fishing,’
explains Anne. There is a single take, filmed from the back window of the car
of Peter driving Gustav away, Anne and the girls receding into the distance.
Before this unscheduled trip, Gustav records a conversation
with Anne in which he asks her when she first had sex. Anne doesn’t want to
talk about it. ‘Sometimes what happens and what should never happen are the
same thing,’ she explains. It is the closest she comes to admitting that she
had a traumatic youth, one which in turn motivates her choice of career.
The twins enjoy horse riding. Anne takes them to a lesson.
On the way, she stops to visit Lina. The twins rush in to play with Lucas. Lina
doesn’t invite Anne in. ‘Did you phone Peter?’ Anne asks. ‘Yes,’ Lina replies
but doesn’t elaborate. The twins rush back and ask to stay. They are told that
they can say goodbye to Lucas, but that’s it.
Driving to pick the girls up from horse riding, Anne’s phone
rings. She moves to pick it up and then drives first into a verge, then turning
the car down a slope. When she and the girls arrive home, they are surprised by
the return of their father. ‘We came back by taxi,’ the twins explain,
excitedly hugging Peter. ‘Mummy’s car broke.’ Anne explains there was an
accident. Peter brought Gustav back from the cabin earlier. He has explained
everything.
Anne insists Gustav is lying. There is a family conference
in which Peter and Anne ask Gustav why. ‘I’m not lying,’ he insists.
One of Anne’s clients pays her a visit to thank her – Anne
earlier referred her to social services after the girl confided that she had
been struck by a family member. Anne had been right to report it, just as she
had been so wrong in her treatment of Gustav.
Unexpectedly, Gustav appears at her office. Anne closes the
curtains before speaking to him. He wants her to admit they had an affair. Anne
will not do so. ‘Then I’ll make a complaint,’ Gustav explains. ‘You’re not
credible,’ Anne explains. In other words, the truth won’t be recognised from a
boy who had trouble with the police in Sweden and broke into Anne’s house – Anne
told Peter this to help get him to believe her. Gustav leaves the office and
heads for boarding school.
At Christmas, Anne brings home a dog for the twins. It is
implied that the dog is a replacement for Gustav. A birthday dinner is thrown
for Anne. Lina attends. She tells Anne that she is enjoying the party. However,
their relationship remains strained.
Right at the beginning of the film, we see the forest. The
camera rotates and moves downward to reveal Anne walking the dog. She throws a
stick. The dog chases it. She walks back to the house. She sees Peter. ‘Why
haven’t you left?’ she asks. ‘Stockholm Police called. They need to speak with
me,’ he explains. ‘Do you want me to come with you?’ Anne asks. ‘No,’ Peter
replies. ‘Will you call me when you get there?’ ‘Yes,’ Peter says and leaves. Anne
walks to the window and stares out at the woods, ashen-faced, guilty or at
least anxious. This scene is repeated in its entirety.
Peter returns later that day. Gustav didn’t return to
boarding school. He made his way to the cabin. He was found outside by a
hunter. He may have been there some time, having frozen in the snow.
In their bedroom, Anne begins a conversation, but Peter
silences her, putting a hand over her mouth. In the film’s final scene, shown
from behind, Peter leads the twins down a path to what we assume is Gustav’s
funeral service. Anne follows several paces behind.
El-Toukhy’s film portrays a complex woman who attempts to do
the right thing but does not recognise or accept her errors of judgment. It is
progressive. Films about women rarely explore shades of grey. Anne believes
that if Gustav simply kept their relationship a secret, then they could
function as a normal family. However, she has no regards for Gustav’s feelings.
Rather she believes that sex is something that men do not combine with
emotional attachment. Sex is not love. We see her find the tape that Gustav
made of their conversation, the proof of her infidelity. It is implied she
destroys it. Interestingly (and perhaps this is a plot flaw), Gustav fails to
mention this to his father. As for Gustav, as much as he is odious and chooses
to harm others as a means of expressing his anger at coming from a broken home,
he is still a work-in-progress, capable of tenderness and able to function in
society.
The point of the film is that Anne’s conception of
victimhood is blinkered by gender. In a courtroom scene, we see her
cross-examining a boy, who ‘accidentally struck’ someone as a door was opened –
the boy was locked in. Anne doesn’t continue questioning him, to ask what he
means by ‘accidentally struck’. To her, the action speaks for itself.
Queen of Hearts is a high-stakes movie. If Anne
confessed her transgression, she would lose both her family and her career –
she has a fear that ‘everything will disappear’. It is implied in the final
image that she has lost the former. Anne may be suffering from narcissistic
personality disorder, which makes her oblivious to boundaries. This may also
account for the absence of friends. However, Dyrholm plays her as principled
and someone you might want to know, not wallowing in anger and resentment. The
film is also a tragedy. In both Queen of Hearts and A Fish
Swimming Upside Down, it is a young man who pays the price for the
woman’s transgression. In two European meditations on the Oedipus complex by
female directors, Oedipus dies rather than kill his father. Sophocles and Freud
got it wrong.
Reviewed on Saturday 2 January 2021, streamed on Mubi
Comments
Post a Comment