Mrs Brown

Loyalty without question. Friendship without equal.

6.7
19971h 45m

When Queen Victoria's husband Prince Albert dies, she finds solace in her trusted servant, Mr. John Brown. But their relationship also brings scandal and turmoil to the monarchy.

Production

Logo for Miramax
Logo for BBC Scotland
Logo for GBH

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Mrs Brown Original Trailer

Mrs Brown Original Trailer

Cast

Photo of Judi Dench

Judi Dench

Queen Victoria

Photo of Billy Connolly

Billy Connolly

John Brown

Photo of Geoffrey Palmer

Geoffrey Palmer

Henry Ponsonby

Photo of Antony Sher

Antony Sher

Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli

Photo of Gerard Butler

Gerard Butler

Archie Brown

Photo of Richard Pasco

Richard Pasco

Doctor Jenner

Photo of David Westhead

David Westhead

Prince of Wales (Bertie)

Photo of Georgie Glen

Georgie Glen

Lady Churchill

Photo of Sara Stewart

Sara Stewart

Princess Alexandra

Photo of Finty Williams

Finty Williams

Princess Helena

Photo of Oliver Ford Davies

Oliver Ford Davies

Dean of Windsor

Photo of Delia Lindsay

Delia Lindsay

Society Lady

Photo of Hattie Ladbury

Hattie Ladbury

Princess Alice

Photo of Rupert Farley

Rupert Farley

Bertie's Valet

Photo of Rebecca Charles

Rebecca Charles

Assistant Dresser

Photo of George Hall

George Hall

Speaker of the House

More Like This

Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

7/10

There have been goodness knows how many theories about the relationship between Queen Victoria and her highland ghillie John Brown, brought from Her Majesty's estate at Balmoral to try to prize her from her routine of melancholy following the death of Prince Albert. In this version, John Madden cleverly decides to emphasise the characterisations of the Queen and of her Highland servant, rather than to try and create something that historians can argue over... Of course it's all speculative, but both Judi Dench and Billy Connolly excel here at building an honest, and ultimately loving friendship that is plausible - especially for the widow surrounded otherwise by an almost acolytic suite of staff. Geoffrey Palmer is also on good form as her Private Secretary (Sir Henry Ponsonby) trying to walk the line between protocol and productivity; and to deal with the resentment across the family and other staff caused by Brown's relationship with his Sovereign as the film progresses. Antony Sher also stands out as the politically savvy Disraeli, David Westhead as the seriously un-amused Prince of Wales and there is an early outing for Gerard Butler as John's brother "Archie". As you'd expect, the technical and creative aspects of the production lend their best efforts to make this a very craftful piece of cinema.

You've reached the end.