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Mary, Queen of Scots

Mary, Queen of Scots

  • Status: Released
  • 22-12-1971
  • Runtime: 128 min
  • Score: 6.7
  • Vote count: 56

Mary Stuart, who was named Queen of Scotland when she was only six days old, is the last Roman Catholic ruler of Scotland. She is imprisoned at the age of 23 by her cousin Elizabeth Tudor, the English Queen and her arch adversary. Nineteen years later the life of Mary is to be ended on the scaffold and with her execution the last threat to Elizabeth's throne has been removed. The two Queens with their contrasting personalities make a dramatic counterpoint to history.

Vanessa Redgrave

Mary, Queen of Scots

Glenda Jackson

Queen Elizabeth

Patrick McGoohan

James Stuart

Timothy Dalton

Henry, Lord Darnley

Nigel Davenport

Lord Bothwell

Trevor Howard

William Cecil

Daniel Massey

Robert Dudley

Ian Holm

David Riccio

Andrew Keir

Ruthven

Tom Fleming

Father Ballard

Katherine Kath

Catherine De Medici

Beth Harris

Mary Seton

Frances White

Mary Fleming

Bruce Purchase

Morton

Brian Coburn

Huntly

Vernon Dobtcheff

Duc De Guise

Raf De La Torre

Cardinal De Guise

Richard Warner

Walsingham

Maria Aitken

Lady Bothwell

Jeremy Bulloch

Andrew

Richard Denning

Francis, King of France

Robert James

John Knox

CinemaSerf

This is a superb portrayal of the troubled late 16th century Scottish Queen from Vanessa Redgrave. Forced to return to an unwelcoming Scotland following the death of her French husband, Catholic Mary arrives to barely disguised hostility from her largely Protestant subjects. Added to her problems, her cousin Elizabeth (Glenda Jackson) is making things difficult for her from south of their border. The story is well known, but the two ladies' performances demonstrate both the flaws and the strengths of each, well. Trevor Howard is great as the manipulative Burghley; as are Timothy Dalton as Mary's dissolute husband Henry Darnley; Ian Holm as the seedy David Rizzio; Nigel Davenport as Bothwell and Patrick McGoohan as her ambitious, plotting, half-brother. The attention to the detail of the time - locations, costumes and a lovely John Barry score all add to the quality of this - broadly - authentic historical drama.