Kristen Stewart he has had to fight many times against the eyes of the world and with the siege of the paparazzi, and he cannot help but feel that the Princess Diana has been misunderstood in the level of harassment she had to suffer by the press, and she feels that she can now measure the dramatic situation that Lady Di had to suffer, all this after interpreting it on the big screen for Spencer, The director’s film Pablo Larraín.
The new movie Spencer premiered at Venice Film Festival on Friday, with Stewart as the actress who again brought back Diana of Wales, her marriage to Prince Charles of Great Britain ended in scandal and divorce, before her death in a car accident in Paris in 1997, after escape from the photographers.

The film focuses on the princess’ decision to escape the pressures of the royal family and take control of her own life at a key time in the early 1990s. 1990.
“She was the most famous woman in the world, she was the most photographed woman in the worldStewart told reporters before the premiere.
“I’ve tried a high level of that, but it doesn’t really come close to this monumental and symbolic representation of a whole group of people, an entire country and the world“, He said.
“I can relate, but I don’t think anyone can understand how he feltStewart said, about the royal family ‘s claustrophobic surveillance Diana, Who was expected to obey protocol and not be able to make their own decisions.
In taking on the role, Stewart joins a long list of actors who have sought to capture the spirit of royalty, most recently Emma Corrin, Who this year won a Golden Globe for his performance in the fourth season of “The Crown” of Netflix.
Spencer, De Pablo Larraín
The new film, which competes for the top prize Golden Lion in Venice, Was directed by the Chilean Pablo Larraín and is described from the beginning as “A fable of a true tragedy.”
Follow the princess for three days a Christmas when the royal family meets at the private residence of the Queen Elizabeth a Sandringham.
First we see Diana behind the wheel on a winding, lost rural road, and late for Christmas lunch at the castle.
Tensions with the Prince Charles (Jack Farthing) are at their peak, after the heir to the throne gave his wife the same pearl necklace he offered to his lover, Camilla Parker Bowles.
Played by Stewart, Diana’s misery is palpable. But more revealing is the inner radiance and brilliance we see when Diana is alone with her children, the young Princes of William i Harry.
“The idea that someone is so desperate to connect and someone who is able to make other people feel so good, feel so bad inside, and be so generous with their energy, we just haven’t had that many. these people, “Stewart said.
“The saddest part of the story is that we’ll never know her and that’s all she wanted. It was just telling the story herself.”