A documentary on the life of Queen Elizabeth II, the longest-lived, longest reigning British monarch and longest serving female head of state in history.A documentary on the life of Queen Elizabeth II, the longest-lived, longest reigning British monarch and longest serving female head of state in history.A documentary on the life of Queen Elizabeth II, the longest-lived, longest reigning British monarch and longest serving female head of state in history.
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
5.9687
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Featured reviews
Congratulations, a fine film
I am always amused and slightly appalled by the extreme criterion folks use to judge art. They so often seem to have an agenda.
This is a wonderful, enthralling documentary. I was enthralled, it made the journey of the queen a human one, a woman's story, and one that gives far more dignity than a bunch of British talking heads disputing the value of a monarchy ever could. This is a wildly creative look at her job, and her life, I hope I am lucky enough to suffer such 'disrespect' as a film about my self offered with such higher art than usually finds a documentary.
This is a wonderful, enthralling documentary. I was enthralled, it made the journey of the queen a human one, a woman's story, and one that gives far more dignity than a bunch of British talking heads disputing the value of a monarchy ever could. This is a wildly creative look at her job, and her life, I hope I am lucky enough to suffer such 'disrespect' as a film about my self offered with such higher art than usually finds a documentary.
A Clip Show,
But a pretty good one. Archival footage from 70 years showing the Queen in various contextual chapters. Some tongue in cheek humour from comedy shows and wistful, clever sounds and music clip overdubs put together in a respectful manner. God Save the Queen!
Creative, respectful, enjoyable and touching. Well done.
Ignore the negative reviews. This was not meant to be either a documentary or a tribute. Just like the title says, it's a portrait and it's made of film footage of the queen throughout her life (all complimentary) paired with one of more footages of people, places or events relatable in one way or another to the particular footage being shown. It was artistic and worked well. The music included some numbers perhaps only Brits would know but overall, it was a mix of oldies and today's music. Why not? The queen has lived though it all. I'm an anglophile from the US. I love the queen. This honored her in a way younger people can relate to. It's not stodgy and it shows the more human side of this wonderful woman. And without spoiling, the way they ended it, if you pay attention, is lovely.
A Nostalgic and moving Tribute
Elizabeth: A Portrait in Parts (2022)
A Documentary- My Rating 7/10
This Scrapbook documentary depicts the long life and times of an extraordinary 20th and 21st Century monarch Queen Elizabeth 11 who is celebrating her Platinum Jubilee this year as well her 96th birthday . It's a Cinematic tribute to an extraordinary woman who is history's longest serving head of state.
I found it a nostalgic and very creative trip down memory lane as I was born a year after the Queens first born son Charles who one day is destined to be King . The world has changed so much in those 73 years but The Queen has been a constant and stable influence during her ten decades on the planet.
Elizabeth: A Portrait in Parts is Directed by Roger Michell who sadly died last year so this is his last film . His 2nd last feature film The Duke is also currently showing in Cinemas but it's a comedy and nothing to do with the Late Duke of Edinburg who of course features in this documentary.
Some of Roger Michell's other great contributions to movies are Notting Hill (1999) Tea With the Dames (2018) ,Hyde Park on Hudson(2012) and Venus (2006) .
He obviously loves the Cinema and I enjoyed the expertly cut clips of famous movies like Cleopatra and Roman Holiday that he uses very effectively to parallel the also expertly cut clips from Queen Elizabeth's long reign . There's also a lot of contemporary music and pop songs used in the soundtrack which add to the nostalgia. My favourite was when the Queen is visiting a machinery factory in the 1960's with Gracie Fields song "I'm the girl who makes the thing ."as background.
The original music for the film is by George Fenton (who composed the soundtrack to The Duke and many other fine movie scores.
I particularly enjoyed the random scrap book like chapter titles used in the documentary like "Let Me Entertain You, Ma'am, Heroes, Britannia, Horribilis, In the Saddle and Our House.
The only narrative used really is the original used in the clips and we get to see the sensitivity and great humour of The Queen with some very personal material that covers the Queen's life as a child through to the present day.
There are those who will possibly take issue with this film because of their republican principles but as Her Majesty has said, "Let us not take ourselves too seriously. None of us have a monopoly on wisdom." I'm not one of them even though if a decent model for an Australian Republic was presented I would vote Yes for a Republic but I have deep affection and admiration for the Queen.
This documentary may be streamed later on television but it's worth seeing on a Cinema screen if you can.
This Scrapbook documentary depicts the long life and times of an extraordinary 20th and 21st Century monarch Queen Elizabeth 11 who is celebrating her Platinum Jubilee this year as well her 96th birthday . It's a Cinematic tribute to an extraordinary woman who is history's longest serving head of state.
I found it a nostalgic and very creative trip down memory lane as I was born a year after the Queens first born son Charles who one day is destined to be King . The world has changed so much in those 73 years but The Queen has been a constant and stable influence during her ten decades on the planet.
Elizabeth: A Portrait in Parts is Directed by Roger Michell who sadly died last year so this is his last film . His 2nd last feature film The Duke is also currently showing in Cinemas but it's a comedy and nothing to do with the Late Duke of Edinburg who of course features in this documentary.
Some of Roger Michell's other great contributions to movies are Notting Hill (1999) Tea With the Dames (2018) ,Hyde Park on Hudson(2012) and Venus (2006) .
He obviously loves the Cinema and I enjoyed the expertly cut clips of famous movies like Cleopatra and Roman Holiday that he uses very effectively to parallel the also expertly cut clips from Queen Elizabeth's long reign . There's also a lot of contemporary music and pop songs used in the soundtrack which add to the nostalgia. My favourite was when the Queen is visiting a machinery factory in the 1960's with Gracie Fields song "I'm the girl who makes the thing ."as background.
The original music for the film is by George Fenton (who composed the soundtrack to The Duke and many other fine movie scores.
I particularly enjoyed the random scrap book like chapter titles used in the documentary like "Let Me Entertain You, Ma'am, Heroes, Britannia, Horribilis, In the Saddle and Our House.
The only narrative used really is the original used in the clips and we get to see the sensitivity and great humour of The Queen with some very personal material that covers the Queen's life as a child through to the present day.
There are those who will possibly take issue with this film because of their republican principles but as Her Majesty has said, "Let us not take ourselves too seriously. None of us have a monopoly on wisdom." I'm not one of them even though if a decent model for an Australian Republic was presented I would vote Yes for a Republic but I have deep affection and admiration for the Queen.
This documentary may be streamed later on television but it's worth seeing on a Cinema screen if you can.
The music is just wrong
Can't believe what a horrible job that's be done with this! The actual footage seeing the queen was nice but the way it's put together was just a kick in the nuts.
Did you know
- TriviaFinal major theatrical documentary feature film about Queen Elizabeth II made prior to the monarch's passing away.
- Quotes
Queen Elizabeth II: Now, do you think they're ready?
- ConnectionsFeatures Caesar and Cleopatra (1945)
- How long is Elizabeth: A Portrait in Part(s)?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $127,684
- Runtime
- 1h 29m(89 min)
- Color
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content





