Diana: Movie Review
Cast: Naomi Watts, Naveen Andrews
Director: Oliver Hirschbiegel
There's no denying the power and emotional sway the so-called People's Princess held over the public.

Diana, the movie, looks at those last two years and finds Naomi Watts giving her best Diana impression, from the sad-looking-down heavily-mascaraed eyes to the tilting to one side of her head. But it's hard to really shake the feeling that you're watching anyone other than Watts in this film, which, is to be frank, more suited to a small screen and is over-dramatic tosh, filled with corny one-liners which are more suited to the page than the screen.
Written by playwright Stephen Jeffreys, the film tries to polish and sparkle and consequently suffers under the same scrutiny afforded Diana in her lifetime. With paparazzi buzzing around Diana from the beginning, it's clear the film-makers are trying to ensure you're in her corner, but this is a film which never shies away from the darker sides of this after-life canonised saint.

Elsewhere, Lost star Naveen Andrews is reduced to a stoic, stuffy, cigarette smoking cardiac surgeon whose emotionless veneer wouldn't go amiss in a remake of Casablanca; consumed with his career first,he desperately wants to be with Watts' Lady Di somehow. A lack of real chemistry between the two is fatal and the wooden acting which ensues, reducing Diana to some kind of giggling school girl who's discovered her first crush, is almost cringe-worthy, no matter how much truth it may or may not be based on.

All in all, Diana the movie is car-crash viewing of the worst kind; stuck between neither fish nor fowl and definitely not in the so-bad-it's-good category, not one person emerges from this overlong car-wreck of a movie with any kind of credibility in tact thanks to the lack of insight or character within.
Rating:

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