Diana
⋆⋆½ out of four stars
Rated: PG-13 for brief strong language, some sensuality and smoking
Theater: Inver Grove
Dismiss it as worthy of a Lifetime Original Movie if you want, but "Diana" gives us insights into this poor little royal plaything that Americans, at least, will find eye-opening.
Based on "Diana, Her Last Love," by Kate Snell, Oliver Hirschbiegel's film depicts a manipulator practicing her most withering lines about her failed marriage to Prince Charles in front of a mirror.
Outcast from the royal family and not close to her own, Diana (Naomi Watts) only takes counsel from a trusted confidante (Juliet Stevenson) and Oonagh Toffolo, her acupuncturist/confessor (Geraldine James).
But she has a genuine gift for empathy. Dashing into a hospital to visit Toffolo's ailing husband, she ignores the nurses who swoon in her presence and the doctors who ogle her. But that empathy leads her to cool, handsome and charming heart surgeon Dr. Hasnat Khan (Naveen Andrews).
Their love affair, the strains of celebrity and of being "the most famous woman in the world" in love with a Pakistani Muslim, sucks up the bulk of "Diana."