So the movie was going well going well really well actually I was like wow this is an incredible movie until they had the who is in charge of Sweden. Make a deal with the king just to get her husband back just to get one of the sisters husband's back, one man and you're bringing in the most evil person in the world into the castle and declaring him the king any plan to fix without any plan to fix the situation and you're just trusting him at his word that you guys are going to sign this thing that's gonna allow all the prisoners to be released. Meanwhile, he only released one prisoner And everything would be forgiven. I'm not sexist at all. I think women should be in high-power jobs. I think women should be athletes. I think women should be whatever they want in this movie though for her to make this decision just to get her cousins husband back and to trust this guy that he's going to stand by his word was , stupid and very naïve and I don't know why in the world she would trust him as soon as he becomes king he can change whatever he wants so she puts all of Sweden at risk for her cousin cousin's husband and her cousin is just as bad for allowing Christina to put all of Sweden at risk just to get her husband back. That's probably one of the most selfish things I have ever ever seen in a movie, yeah let's screw everyone in the country as long as I get my husband back it's not like you don't know how vicious and psychotic these guys are you both have seen it firsthand sort when he killed her whole family murdered them with his crew. Everyone of his whole family, including him they tried to murder her , but she only got clipped and then Christina seen it with all around with her husband has told her about and then her husband just now coming home but you trust this man you're gonna allow him to become king when he just gives only one prisoner right there and then you should've been like forget it that deals off They killed the movie it really like it killed destroyed the movie turn this incredible movie into a piece of garbage.
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The movie started off as like an eight about halfway through. It went down to like two.
An odd and ill-advised beast of a movie
Well, this movie was... not great, but a bit of a peculiar (using the word "funny" here would give a wrong impression, since the movie is not half as funny as it thinks it is) experience.
Historically, the Stockholm blood-bath was an infamous event where the Danish army and royalty executed a big group of Swedish aristocrats, so (the saying goes) the street were flowing with blood. Mostly, the legacy of this event has been that it is shameful for Denmark to have perpetrated it, and a good reason for Sweden to hate us (I am Danish, you see). However, seen in a modern and progressive light, was it all that bad to kill off a portion of the oppressive elite? Was it really such a slight to the common people of Sweden?
Anyway, when I went into this movie I hadn't read anything about it, other than that it had some Danish actors in it - so I suffered from the misimpression (is that a word?) that it was actually a Danish-produced movie! And since the Danes in it are presented as cartoonishly evil, I thought it was kind of a funny self-satire on the "Danish" film-makers' part. Even though I didn't like the immature vulgarities of it, I thought it was a redeeming feature of the movie. In my defense, I believed the movie to be Danish-produced because this exact style of humor is (sadly) extremely wide-spread in Danish movies.
But then, as the end credits rolled I realized it was a Swedish-produced movie - meaning that the oh-so-good Swedish characters and the oh-so-evil Danish characters were just the usual bunch of clichés found whenever some country makes a movie about their (past or present) enemies. No self-satire; just caricatured and unnuanced finger-pointing at the easy targets. [EDIT: It actually turns out that the movie is a Swedish/Danish co-production, so I guess the self-satire is there after all. Except that the screenwriters are Norwegian, which is kind of hilarious.]
To be honest, whether the movie were Danish or Swedish-produced doesn't change my rating of it. The attempted comedy fell flat in any case (you see, all the Swedish characters were dead serious), and the movie didn't know whether to be a comedy or a historical movie. It was also surprising to me that it was in English, since it concerns Danish and Swedish events, and starring (mostly) Nordic actors. The movie indeed feels made for international streaming; it has many of those hallmarks of sloppy, rushed and mediocre streaming service content.
There are two reasons I'm not rating this movie even lower. The first is the female actors, which were very good and admirable. It's a great shame that they are being disrespected by being forced to be part of a movie more dominated by immature and misogynist male "humor". The Freja character reminded enormously of Miranda Otto's character from Lord of the Rings (Eowyn? Was that her name?), and was a strong character, if perhaps not super-realistic in the historical setting.
The other redeeming feature of the movie is that it does start some thoughts about what happened in the in/famous event, and does make us check it out on Wikipedia, at least. As they say at the beginning of the movie, some of this actually happened.