Movie Review: The Iron Lady
In sharp contrast with the sex appeal and porcelain face of Marilyn Monroe, Margaret Thatcher's teethy smile and power hairstyle, a light-auburn bouffant, do not inspire a great deal of lust in the viewer.
After the success of her début feature Mamma Mia!, director Phylidda Lloyd set her sights on Lady Thatcher, widely known as the "Iron Lady" (though, like so many other things, the origins of this nickname are left out of the film). Thatcher served as the United Kingdom's first female prime minister from 1979 until her ouster in 1990. She had a decisive influence on world history, but Lloyd's fainthearted approach to this grand lady's extraordinary combination of ambition and inflexibility has produced a film with even less dramatic weight than the cinematic rendition of the ABBA fairytale.


By André Crous - Staff Writer | Comments (1) | Post comment In sharp contrast with the sex appeal and porcelain face of Marilyn Monroe, Margaret Thatcher's teethy smile and power hairstyle, a light-auburn bouffant, do not inspire a great deal of lust
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