Queen at Sea review highlights dementia and ethical dilemmas

Lance Hammer's Queen at Sea, his first feature in 18 years since Ballast, premiered at the Berlin Film Festival. The film stars Juliette Binoche and Tom Courtenay in a story exploring consent and autonomy amid dementia. It presents a nuanced drama of family tensions and caregiving challenges.

Lance Hammer's Queen at Sea marks his return to directing after an 18-year gap since his 2008 debut Ballast. Reviewed in the competition section at the Berlin Film Festival on February 17, 2026, the 121-minute U.K.-U.S. production delves into the complexities of dementia, consent, and family dynamics.

The story centers on middle-aged professor Amanda, played by Juliette Binoche, who moves temporarily to North London with her teenage daughter Sarah (Florence Hunt) to care for her mother Leslie (Anna Calder-Marshall), who has advanced dementia. Amanda discovers her stepfather Martin (Tom Courtenay), Leslie's primary caregiver, in a compromising situation with her mother, leading her to call the police and report a sexual assault due to Leslie's inability to consent, as confirmed by her doctor.

Hammer's screenplay, which he also edited, avoids simple moral judgments. Martin, deeply loving and devoted to Leslie, claims an understanding of her desires rooted in their long history. Amanda grapples with regret over involving authorities, fearing separation of the elderly couple. The narrative shifts to procedural elements, including a rape kit examination that feels dehumanizing given Leslie's limited verbal abilities.

Performances anchor the film's emotional depth. Courtenay portrays Martin's frustration and compassion, blending obstinacy with tenderness. Binoche conveys Amanda's exhausted helplessness. Calder-Marshall's subtle depiction of Leslie captures fleeting humanity amid vacancy, making her central to the thematic mystery.

Subplots involve Sarah's coming-of-age experiences, mirroring generational contrasts in intimacy and care. Cinematographer Adolpho Veloso employs a reduced shutter angle for a jittery effect, evoking dementia's disorientation while maintaining naturalistic 35mm frames. Drawing from research on elder care and assault, the film echoes Ken Loach's social realism, emphasizing enduring love amid loss, distinct from more misery-focused works like Amour or The Father.

Production involves The Bureau and Alluvial Film Company, with producers Tristan Goligher and Hammer. World sales are handled by The Match Factory in Cologne. Dialogue mixes English and French.

مقالات ذات صلة

Black-and-white photorealistic portrait of Sandra Hüller as a 17th-century woman disguised as a soldier in 'Rose', acclaimed at Berlin Film Festival.
صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

Sandra Hüller receives rave reviews for 'Rose' at Berlin Film Festival

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

Sandra Hüller has earned widespread critical acclaim for her performance in 'Rose,' a black-and-white period drama directed by Markus Schleinzer, which premiered in competition at the 2026 Berlin Film Festival. The film follows a 17th-century woman disguised as a man who returns to a Protestant village after serving as a soldier. Reviewers praise Hüller's nuanced portrayal and the film's exploration of gender dynamics.

Sandra Hüller, the Oscar-nominated star of 'Anatomy of a Fall,' spoke about her demanding role in Markus Schleinzer’s period drama 'Rose,' where she portrays a 17th-century woman disguised as a man. The black-and-white film, set after the Thirty Years’ War, premieres in competition at the Berlinale. Hüller detailed the physical and emotional preparations for the part in an interview with The Hollywood Reporter.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

Several films vying for awards attention this year delve deeply into the complexities of parenthood amid a turbulent world. Directors and writers explore postpartum struggles, grief, economic pressures, and intergenerational trauma through personal and historical lenses. These stories highlight universal anxieties faced by parents and children alike.

Geneviève Dulude-De Celles's second feature, Nina Roza, has garnered positive reviews at the 2026 Berlin Film Festival for its exploration of immigrant identity. The film follows a Bulgarian-born art expert returning to his homeland to assess a child prodigy's work, prompting a personal reckoning. Critics praise its subtle narrative and strong performances.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

Building on earlier awards season films exploring parenthood's complexities, new contenders zero in on mothers' raw struggles with children's illnesses, mental health, and personal crises. Titles like 'Rosemead' and 'Sinners' amplify emotional tolls and cultural stigmas, continuing the dialogue on parental sacrifices.

Five years after The Queen's Gambit captivated audiences, Netflix has released Queen of Chess, a documentary chronicling the rise of chess prodigy Judit Polgar. The film follows her journey from age 12 in 1989 to becoming the youngest grandmaster at 15. It highlights her challenges against top players like Garry Kasparov.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

The film Hamnet, starring Irish actors Jessie Buckley and Paul Mescal, is expected to secure multiple nominations at the 2026 Academy Awards. Directed by Chloé Zhao, the movie has already earned six Golden Globes nods, signaling strong Oscar potential. Other Irish productions and talents are also in contention across various categories.

 

 

 

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