TELEVISION REVIEW: "Reign"
Trigger Warning: This review contains mentions of attempted sexual
assault.
While I enjoy "high-brow" arts and entertainment and aim
to surround myself with the best in the arts as often as possible, there's a
perverse pleasure in enjoying a work of media that revels in how ridiculously
bad it is. Reign, which airs on the CW and is in its first
season, is such a guilty pleasure.
Reign ostensibly chronicles Mary, Queen of Scots', life
at the French court before she married Francis and united Scotland and France.
What this show actually does is combine the soapy romantic and sexual
drama of "Gossip Girl" with its pseudo-historical context, throwing
in elements of horror and mystery, and mixing in a heaping serving of political
intrigue.
After surviving a poisoning attempt at the convent where she has
grown up, Mary (Adelaide Kane) is forced to seek refuge in the French Court
with King Henry (Alan van Sprang), Queen Catherine de' Medici (wonderfully
played by Megan Follows, with more skill and adroitness than this show frankly
deserves), her fiance, Prince Francis (Toby Regbo), to whom she was betrothed
at age seven, and the King's bastard son, the (fictional, it must be noted) ill-reputed
Sebastian (Torrance Coombs).
Along for the ride are four of Mary's childhood friends, who are
either minor nobility or extremely wealthy; they have come the French court to
wait on Mary, but also to find rich, titled husbands and secure their futures.
Also thrown into the fray are the Queen's psychic/seer Nostradamus
(Rossif Sutherland) and a mysterious girl who lives within the walls of the
castle.
(facebook.com/cwreign)
The plot is set quickly in motion as soon as Mary and her
entourage arrive. While Mary and Francis have been promised to one
another for years, Francis is unsure of whether their union is still
politically feasible. Upon seeing Mary for the first time, Nostradamus
has a vision that Mary will cause Francis' death, which alarms and frightens
Catherine and sets her on a path to ruin or kill Mary, however possible, in
order to spare her son.
Where the pilot disappointed me, and almost made me stop watching,
was the cheap use of attempted sexual assault as a plot point. In the
pilot, Mary's lady-in-waiting Lola (Anna Popplewell)'s country beau comes to
court from Scotland to marry her. Soon enough, he is forced by outside
powers to try to "destroy Mary's virtue" while she sleeps, thus
rendering her unable to marry Francis. However, Mary heeds the mysterious
castle girl's warning not to drink the drugged wine, and is thus able to fight
him off and cry for help.
While this element of the plot serves to show just how far
Catherine will go in order to get rid of Mary, and to establish just how much
danger Mary is in at the French court, it seems completely mishandled. In
subsequent episodes, Mary's attempted rape is not dealt with; she apparently
suffers little to no emotional fallout from this traumatic event.
(facebook.com/cwreign)
There are many elements of the show that seem promising, despite
the disappointments of the pilot. As the story progresses over the
subsequent episodes, it's evident that the show is going for full-on
ludicrousness. From the uniformly English accents of the entire cast
(including the French and Scots) to the obligatory love triangle among Mary,
Francis, and Sebastian, to the lovely if totally inaccurate wardrobe and hair
choices (I doubt that many girls in 1500s France had access to modern-day hair
flat-ironing techniques) and its completely anachronistic soundtrack, every
aspect of this show is designed to entertain in the most consciously, guiltily
addictive way possible. Kisses are exchanged furtively in staircases,
looks linger longer than they ought, and in one particularly silly scene, Mary
and her friends spy on the consummation of Francis' sister Elizabeth's
marriage, embarrassed and titillated in equal measure.
The commitment to camp is not always a bad thing. Megan
Follows is probably the best part of this show. Every line delivery is
completely appropriate for whatever mood she is trying to evoke; she sells
Catherine as both an imperious schemer and a loving mother who just wants the
best for her son.
Adelaide Kane’s Mary also is a high point of the show. She
proves a steely and believable young queen over the course of the show. The
majority of the show sees Mary grappling with her feelings towards Francis, her
duty to her country, and her attempts at surviving Catherine's nefarious plots.
Kane brings a degree of emotional depth and agency to the role of a young
woman thrust into an untenable position. Additionally, Toby Regbo's
Francis is charming and cold in equal measure, and manages to convey the mixed
feelings of duty and love with sensitivity.
Aside from the portrayals of Catherine and Mary, two strong women
at odds with one another, the acting is not quite as strong throughout.
Terrance Coombs is less adept than Regbo at creating chemistry with Mary; the
Sebastian-Mary portion of the love triangle does not feel organic or
particularly charged. He is also just not that interesting of a
character, but this issue may be more due to the writing than to the acting.
(facebook.com/cwreign)
As for Mary's entourage--each girl has a few defining moments
throughout the progression of the show, yet for the most part, they are
unmemorable. Celina Sinden's Greer, the only lady-in-waiting who does not
come from royalty, is given a romance with a kitchen boy in later episodes that
is sweetly done. It serves to draw attention to the struggle Greer faces
between her duty to marry a titled man and following her heart.
Kenna (played by Caitlin Stasey) catches the King's eye, and much
of her subplots revolve around her trying to become his new mistress.
Lola (after the pilot) and especially Aylee (Jenessa Grant) are not given
much to do at all; Aylee is an especially flat character with little motivation
or development. Additionally, the affair between Kenna and the King is
rather creepy due to the inherent power imbalance in their relationship, not to
mention the gaping age difference.
From left:
Caitlin Stasey as Kenna, Jenessa Grant as Aylee, Adelaide Kane as Mary, Anna
Popplewell as Lola, and Celia Sinden as Greer.
(facebook.com/cwreign)
Despite the weaknesses of the show, as it progresses, it soon
learns how to juggle its various genres (some more successfully than others).
The political tensions provide some of the strongest moments of the show,
while I could probably do without the constant reminders of spooky Pagans
running around sacrificing people.
Ultimately, Reign is Mary's story, and luckily, she is strongly
written and portrayed. For people who just want to enjoy (in the loosest sense
of the word) a television program with pretty people plotting and smoldering in
exquisite clothes and who don't mind how it ignores historical events,
Reign is a good bet for being entertained. It airs on the CW
on Thursdays at 9/8 central.
I could not agree more with this review. As a historical fiction FREAK I was very excited to see this. However, there is very little history in this show; even things that are sparsely documented and could allow for some latitude are pushed so over the top it that I actually cringed a few times. The evil, plotting, Queen Catherine is the best thing about it. I do like the fact that you have said that given its problems, it is still entertaining. .... :)
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