First came a resolute queen mother in the film "The Queen," and now comes
a British film about "The Iron Lady" -- former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher.
Pathe Productions announced Tuesday in London it had commissioned a film
about Thatcher, set during the 1982 Falkland Islands war with Argentina in which
200 British soldiers and 655 Argentinians died.
Pathe said the film would cover the 17 days leading up to the conflict and
would concentrate on Thatcher's controversial decision to go to war over
Britain's sparsely populated possessions in the South Atlantic.
Argentina, which claims the islands, invaded them in April 1982, and its
troops were forced out two months later by a British task force.
Britain's victory boosted Thatcher's waning popularity and the Conservative
Party went on to win the 1983 election by a huge margin. She remained in power
until 1990, transforming British society with her free-market policies.
Pathe said the conflict forced Thatcher to "confront her private fears, face
down the men who doubted her and forge the image that even today casts a shadow
across the political landscape."
The success of Stephen Frears' film "The Queen" depicting Queen Elizabeth II
in the week following the 1997 death of Princess Diana has rekindled interest in
British dramas about recent history.
Backed by Pathe, BBC Films and DJ Films, the Thatcher project is produced by
Damian Jones, whose credits include "The History Boys" and "Welcome to
Sarajevo." The script is being written by Brian Fillis, who wrote the British
Broadcasting Corp. drama "Fear of Fanny," about television chef Fanny Craddock.
The Thatcher film has yet to be cast, and no director has been named.
Thatcher has been portrayed before in film and television, although usually
in a peripheral role. Most recently, Kika Markham played the British leader in
"The Line of Beauty," a BBC television adaptation of Alan Hollinghurst's novel
about sex and politics in the 1980s.