Harry & Meghan review – so sickening I almost brought up my breakfast
Although
there are sweet moments alongside the vomit-inducing, the overriding message of
this royal documentary is: the late Queen was right to keep stumm
Lucy Mangan
Lucy Mangan
@LucyMangan
Thu 8 Dec
2022 13.11 GMT
Well, it’s
Christmas for Netflix all right. The first gobbet of “educational or
entertainment” material that the Duke and Duchess of Sussex are contracted to
create as part of their £112m deal with the streaming platform has been
delivered. Six episodes of Harry & Meghan, an up-close-and-personal
documentary of their life together have been made. Divided into two “volumes”
of three, the first volume has now dropped. Like a turd into a stocking, may be
the royal family’s feeling – but for the rest of us it is entertainment, and
indeed an education of sorts. Mainly in how right the late Queen was to keep
stumm for her entire 70-year reign.
The
Sussexes have clearly suffered, in ways most of us will not experience. Whether
they have suffered quite as much as they think is another question. At one
point, Harry says in wonder that his wife first sacrificed everything for him –
by leaving her life in the US and joining him and the royal family in England –
and then he in turn sacrificed everything for her by leaving the royal family
and joining her in the US. Which is entirely true and yet not at all true at
the same time. A feeling that persists throughout the three hours of
insight/non-insight we have been gifted so far.
There are
lots of private photos from the couple’s early courtship, and that they were,
and remain, deeply in love is – unless both of them are Oscar-winning actors –
beyond dispute. There is lots of archive footage of “my mum” – Diana, Princess
of Wales – being hounded by mobs of photographers. There is lots of time spent
interviewing the Sussexes being charming and funny together (“Maybe they were
surprised a ginger could land such a beautiful woman,” Harry says, recalling the
Windsors’ first meeting with Meghan). There is a little time spent interviewing
Harry’s friends and more spent on Meghan’s, who are effusive in their praise of
her acting, her empathy, her activism. “She’s fed through service,” says one,
which took me a moment to understand and then another moment to suppress my
rising breakfast.
The first
episode concentrates on Harry’s childhood, the blissful secret courtship and
ends with the story of their relationship breaking. The second covers Meghan’s
childhood, the indubitably racist coverage of the engagement – one of the
earliest headlines describes “Harry’s Girl” as “(almost) straight outta
Compton” – and absolutely overt bigotry of much of the commentary on social
media. The third comprises a potted history of British slavery and the
monarchy’s central role in it, Harry’s work on his “unconscious bias”, his
happy years in the army and the fracturing of Meghan’s family in the run-up to
the wedding, courtesy of what seems to have been her father and half-sister’s
willingness to talk to the tabloids desperate for any negative story they could
get.
But in the
end – what are we left with? Exactly the same story we always knew, told in the
way we would expect to hear it from the people who are telling it. Those who
don’t care won’t watch. Those who do care – which is to say are voyeuristically
invested in the real-life soap opera – will still read into it anything they
want to and doubtless confirm all their previous ideas. There is plenty here to
start another round of tabloid frenzy, particularly in Harry’s mention of
members of the royal family who consider the pressure placed on anyone
“marrying in” a rite of passage and resist allowing anyone else to avoid what
their own spouses went through, and who bow to internal pressure to choose a
wife who “fits the mould”. Which is to say – it is hard to see who, beyond the
media, the villains of the piece, will really gain from this? A period
of silence should be welcomed.
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