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Other Boleyn Girl, The (2008)

Release Date:
Friday, February 29, 2008

MPAA Rating:
PG-13

Rating Reason:
For mature thematic elements, sexual content and some violent images

Genre:
Drama

Starring:
Natalie Portman, Scarlett Johansson, Eric Bana, Kristin Scott Thomas, Mark Rylance, David Morrissey

Written By:
Peter Morgan

Director:
Justin Chadwick

Official Site:

Synopsis:
A sumptuous and sensual tale of intrigue, romance and betrayal set against the backdrop of a defining moment in European history, "The Other Boleyn Girl" tells the story of two beautiful sisters, Anne (Natalie Portman) and Mary (Scarlett Johansson) Boleyn who, driven by their family's blind ambition, compete for the love of the handsome and passionate King Henry VIII (Eric Bana). While both women eventually share the king's bed, only one will ascend to the throne for a brief and turbulent reign that ends tragically with a swing of the executioner's sword.

Other Boleyn Girl, The (2008) | Review

Where's the Loyalty?
Elisabeth Leitch

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The story of sisters Anne and Mary Boleyn (Natalie Portman and Scarlett Johansson) is a tragedy of epic proportions. It is one that tears apart husband and wife, brother and sister, and father and child. It is one that takes the lives of many and leaves the lives of many others in ruin. But the saddest part of The Other Boleyn Girl is that it never had to be that way. And the hardest part is watching as it all unfolds.

You see, in the world of Anne and Mary Boleyn, family status is everything. If one member of the family can climb the ranks of position and power, the rest of the family will be brought up along his or her side. And with two daughters in his hand and that very reality in his mind, it is almost as if Thomas Boleyn (Mark Rylance) sees it as sin to reach for anything less than the greatest power he can imagine.

And so begins the Boleyn family’s tragic entanglement with the throne of England, the King at its head, and the brutal reality that when the only power we seek is one bestowed by man, it can also be stolen right back with no more than the selfish rhyme and reason with which it was given.

If today’s romantic entanglements are a game, then the story that unfolds between King Henry (Eric Bana), Anne Boleyn, and Mary Boleyn might as well be American Gladiator. From the beginning, it is all about power—who has it, who wants it, and what must be done to get more of it. And although Mary pleads to simply live a normal life with the man she loves, and Lady Boleyn cautions that to think of ambition as a virtue instead of a sin is pure foolishness, with Anne and Thomas at the helm, the games begin.

At first Anne is sent to the plate. When she stumbles, Mary steps in. Although Mary does so reluctantly, in her hands a connection with the King is forged and the family’s power begins to grow. When the family fears the King’s allegiance to Mary may be tested, Anne is brought back off the bench to keep him distracted from any non-Boleyn women who might seek to take their place. But as only becomes clearer with time, when the pursuit of power becomes our life’s ambition, sharing it with others is just not an option when you can have it all to yourself. And although that truth is at the forefront of every one of Anne’s actions from the moment she returns to the royal palace, the tragic reality that she and her family fail to fully grasp is that she is not the only one who thinks that way.

Although the King has more power than anyone around him, when it comes down to it, sharing his power with anyone else is not really his thing either. From the beginning of the movie, the importance of producing a male heir emphasizes his desire to keep his power all within his own grasp. He reveals his willingness to use his position however he pleases by essentially commanding a married woman to be his mistress and cheating on his wife without a second thought. Although Anne’s fiery spirit initially drives the King away, it is later what draws him back. But he does not come back because he actually respects the power he sees in her. Instead, he only returns because he must have it for himself. Once he has done what he must to take it, the harsh reality Anne and her family face is that rather than gaining power for themselves, they have surrendered almost all of it to the King. And so, when all they have left raises even smallest challenge to his position over them, the King barely bats an eye as he deals one final blow to the Boleyn sisters and their family and claims their last shreds of power for his very own.

In many ways, the story of Anne, Mary, and King Henry is reminiscent of the story of King David and Bathsheba. Both the actions of Henry and Anne mirror those of David, when he took what wanted without concern for anyone else and betrayed even his most loyal subjects to obtain it. As David says when he is unwittingly told the story of what he has just done, “As surely as the Lord lives, this man deserves to die!” After the betrayal that Anne has bestowed on those around her, there is a least a part of you that has to say she kind of sets herself up for what is coming. Watching King Henry flaunt all the rules he enforces with nothing but condemnation for those around him, his unfortunate death at the hands of a foreign army or a local assassin might seem about right. But as Anne says as she tearfully faces her judgment, she holds on to the hope that there is in fact something else beyond the tragic consequences of foolish ambition and the selfish pursuits. And that hope is in the mercy of God.

Greater than any King or ruler on this earth, God could have easily kept all power for himself. He could rule over us with an iron fist of selfishness and control, using us only for his own means and knocking us down whenever we fail to promote them. He could wipe us out whenever we offend him. He could take all status and position from our names at any time he pleases. But instead, God chooses not to. By giving us free will, he grants us all a portion of his influence and authority every single day. Desiring us to grow and thrive in the lives we lead, he shows us that he is not jealous of the potential he has chosen to share with us. And as he revealed when he spared David’s life after David stole both the wife and the life of another, even when we use the power he has given us in very unwise ways, he would much rather use his power to restore our own than to strip us of all that we have left and leave us to die.

When asked why she still stands by her sister after all that Anne has done to her, Mary replies, “She is my sister and therefore one half of me.” And when I think about what God might say if asked the same question, I can’t help but imagine him saying almost the same thing. For we are his children, created in his image, and therefore one part of him. And thankfully, even in a world where parents betray children, husbands betray wives, and sisters betray sisters, he, like Mary, chooses to stand by our side.


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