Dubai Telegraph - 'Lost King' keeps British royals center-stage at Toronto festival

EUR -
AED 4.306892
AFN 75.646395
ALL 95.724676
AMD 440.383498
AOA 1075.402786
ARS 1608.085285
AUD 1.660634
AWG 2.110932
AZN 1.998313
BAM 1.955283
BBD 2.358476
BDT 143.861942
BHD 0.442483
BIF 3480.679195
BMD 1.17274
BND 1.492105
BOB 8.091859
BRL 5.874493
BSD 1.17099
BTN 108.630262
BWP 15.720841
BYN 3.360911
BYR 22985.699188
BZD 2.355077
CAD 1.623248
CDF 2697.30186
CHF 0.925554
CLF 0.026668
CLP 1047.072999
CNY 8.007515
CNH 8.003896
COP 4264.671791
CRC 541.956627
CUC 1.17274
CUP 31.077603
CVE 110.235837
CZK 24.379388
DJF 208.524835
DKK 7.473758
DOP 70.511346
DZD 155.090971
EGP 62.282523
ERN 17.591096
ETB 183.744691
FJD 2.593519
FKP 0.871382
GBP 0.871601
GEL 3.155128
GGP 0.871382
GHS 12.886591
GIP 0.871382
GMD 86.200888
GNF 10274.281963
GTQ 8.95763
GYD 244.98519
HKD 9.18484
HNL 31.099773
HRK 7.535913
HTG 153.539382
HUF 375.515762
IDR 20041.301486
ILS 3.558339
IMP 0.871382
INR 109.170935
IQD 1533.994185
IRR 1543472.109781
ISK 143.297523
JEP 0.871382
JMD 185.141021
JOD 0.831519
JPY 186.788171
KES 151.529913
KGS 102.556542
KHR 4687.759864
KMF 492.551108
KPW 1055.443518
KRW 1741.014707
KWD 0.362014
KYD 0.975842
KZT 553.363609
LAK 25823.168542
LBP 104866.057933
LKR 369.552236
LRD 215.463
LSL 19.212217
LTL 3.462796
LVL 0.709379
LYD 7.444031
MAD 10.884021
MDL 20.175663
MGA 4859.714374
MKD 61.623698
MMK 2463.101174
MNT 4197.555211
MOP 9.446501
MRU 46.804618
MUR 54.556297
MVR 18.131
MWK 2030.462846
MXN 20.290044
MYR 4.649959
MZN 75.008877
NAD 19.212217
NGN 1594.344064
NIO 43.088601
NOK 11.170234
NPR 173.80802
NZD 2.009837
OMR 0.450923
PAB 1.17099
PEN 3.952054
PGK 5.068659
PHP 70.219557
PKR 326.614995
PLN 4.254117
PYG 7572.996582
QAR 4.269071
RON 5.092392
RSD 117.338958
RUB 90.423579
RWF 1710.047611
SAR 4.401975
SBD 9.450111
SCR 17.808289
SDG 704.81699
SEK 10.873585
SGD 1.49384
SLE 28.878761
SOS 669.222959
SRD 43.917976
STD 24273.345166
STN 24.49352
SVC 10.246289
SYP 129.626608
SZL 19.216916
THB 37.771646
TJS 11.130156
TMT 4.110453
TND 3.421695
TRY 52.380465
TTD 7.946898
TWD 37.224875
TZS 3038.69612
UAH 50.876041
UGX 4332.853754
USD 1.17274
UYU 47.247501
UZS 14239.233045
VES 558.033909
VND 30885.274174
VUV 140.185433
WST 3.206853
XAF 655.783514
XAG 0.015387
XAU 0.000247
XCD 3.169388
XCG 2.110442
XDR 0.815584
XOF 655.783514
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.115659
ZAR 19.254112
ZMK 10556.069282
ZMW 22.278106
ZWL 377.621722
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • NGG

    -0.0300

    90.29

    -0.03%

  • GSK

    -0.1500

    58.21

    -0.26%

  • BTI

    -0.0400

    58.81

    -0.07%

  • RELX

    -0.0400

    33.3

    -0.12%

  • RIO

    1.1300

    98.26

    +1.15%

  • AZN

    -0.9600

    204.03

    -0.47%

  • BCE

    -0.5400

    23.35

    -2.31%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    22.43

    +0.18%

  • CMSD

    0.0400

    22.63

    +0.18%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2700

    16.96

    -1.59%

  • JRI

    0.0400

    13.02

    +0.31%

  • VOD

    -0.1600

    15.69

    -1.02%

  • BCC

    -0.4100

    80.17

    -0.51%

  • BP

    0.5400

    46.44

    +1.16%

'Lost King' keeps British royals center-stage at Toronto festival
'Lost King' keeps British royals center-stage at Toronto festival / Photo: Michael loccisano - GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP

'Lost King' keeps British royals center-stage at Toronto festival

From "The Queen" to "The Lost King," which had its world premiere at the Toronto film festival Friday, Stephen Frears has built much of his storied career directing movies about the British monarchy.

Text size:

But a day after the death of Queen Elizabeth II united millions around the world in grief, he admitted he was still at a loss to explain why the global public remains so fixated on the royal family.

"I don't know, people just are! And I seem to have profited from it. So I should keep quiet," he joked to AFP on the film's red carpet at North America's biggest film festival.

His latest comedy-drama "The Lost King" -- the stranger-than-fiction true story of a Scottish housewife finding a Medieval English king beneath a car park, given the Hollywood big-screen treatment -- was already an improbable movie, before the timing of its world premiere.

"It's very, very nice to be here, and quite odd on this day of all days," the director told the premiere audience at Toronto's Royal Alexandra Theatre, which had dimmed its marquee lights following word of the Queen's passing.

"Here we are at the premiere of our movie 'The Lost King' on the day when the world is coming to terms with the lost queen," co-writer Jeff Pope told AFP on the red carpet.

The movie itself -- starring Sally Hawkins and Steve Coogan -- depicts how amateur historian Philippa Langley defied all the odds to successfully track down and unearth the 500-year-old remains of controversial monarch Richard III.

"The death of the Queen is something that most Britons are genuinely moved by and, whatever their cultural differences, most people have huge respect for the Queen and what she did," Coogan told AFP on the red carpet.

"But putting that to one side, I think our film is not really about an obsession with monarchy itself -- it's specifically Richard III, who is this sort of demonized king.

"And Philippa Langley herself was marginalized, and is marginalized even after her quest to discover the lost king."

- 'Woman King' -

Elsewhere in Toronto Friday, Viola Davis and John Boyega kept the royal theme center-stage as they walked the red carpet for the launch of "The Woman King," a historical epic about the 19th-century female warriors of the west African kingdom of Dahomey.

"It's great to have a project that highlights female leaders, but at the same time, it's great to show the vulnerabilities and the hardship that can sometimes come with that," Boyega told AFP.

"To show what needs to be overcome... I think (is) something that men and women can be inspired by," he added.

And Hillary Clinton introduced "In Her Hands," a new Netflix documentary about women's rights in Afghanistan which she produced alongside her daughter Chelsea.

It focuses on Zarifa Ghafari, one of Afghanistan's first female mayors, who survived a Taliban assassination attempt and whose father was killed before she fled the country upon the fall of Kabul last year.

The former US Secretary of State said she had fallen in love with Afghan "women and girls who were able to go to school and practice their professions and, as in Zarifa's case, enter politics."

"But as we all know, tragically, the story that you're about to see is one that's almost unimaginable -- to be forced to leave your home, your friends, members of your extended family, to seek a new life elsewhere," she added.

- A-listers -

The Toronto International Film Festival has witnessed the return of large cinephile crowds for which it is renowned, after being hit badly by the pandemic for two muted years.

Steven Spielberg will lead a host of Hollywood A-listers across the border for the world premiere of his deeply personal, childhood-inspired "The Fabelmans."

Other stars due in Toronto this weekend include Jessica Chastain and Eddie Redmayne in "The Good Nurse," Jennifer Lawrence in "Causeway," and Daniel Craig in "Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery."

TIFF runs until September 18.

U.Siddiqui--DT