King Arthur (2004)

reviewed by
Andy Keast


King Arthur (2004): ** out of ****

Directed by Antoine Fuqua. Screenplay by David Franzoni. Starring Clive Owen,

Hugh Dancy, Stephen Dillane, Ioan Gruffudd, Keira Knightley, Mads Mikkelsen,

Stellan Skarsgård and Ray Winstone.
by Andy Keast

"King Arthur" is a good example of why true stories beget myth. The Arthur

legend is an idealized version of history, a history I can only imagine as

being very vague and dull. Truth is stranger than fiction, but in the case of

myth, it just isn't as interesting or nearly as fun. I remember as a kid

reading *Le Morte d'Arthur* and T.H. White's charming *The Once and Future

King,* and while it's commendable that someone wants to tell the supposed "true

story" behind it all, I thought to myself watching this: *Do I really want -or

need- to know?* Any true story of the boy king can only be distilled from a

fragmented patchwork of history anyway (hence a better work of fiction), so why

bother?

To synopsize the film is to sadly refer oneself to the History Channel. The

Roman Empire is falling, and outlying territories throughout Europe are engaged

in various skirmishes for autonomy. The Roman army had included the Sarmatian

Knights, lead by Arthur (Clive Owen). The Romans are leaving Briton, and the

Sarmatians will gain their independence, of course, after the proverbial "one

last job." I like Clive Owen as a film personality, but not in this movie. In

the BMW film series "The Hire" he has the action hero charm of Errol Flynn or

someone from a Republic serial. Not here. As the young king, comes off more

as a grizzled infantryman than as any would-be leader -imagine Charles Bronson

playing the President. The rest of the cast is fine. Stephen Dillane, as

Merlin, is buried under so much fake hair and makeup that virtually anyone

could've handled the part. Actors like Stellan Skarsgård and Mads Mikkelsen

are always dependable. Keira Knightley looks especially ghostlike, as if she

wandered in from a Tim Burton production next door. Ray Winstone strangely

produces the film's best performance by being reduced to comic relief.

The film is directed by Antoine Fuqua and produced by Jerry Bruckheimer, and to

their credit, the epic battle scenes are nicely done. They're filmed in such a

way so that one can actually discern the strategy of an attack, and I was

grateful to see real human beings in front of the camera instead of those movie

vistas blanketed with CGI. The screenplay by David Franzoni ("Gladiator") is a

sequence of historical fragments which may or may not have happened, but more

so a clothesline for swordplay and military pep talk. If I may engage in some

hero worship, let me state that the real reason to see "King Arthur" is for the

photography by Poland's great Slawomir Idziak. He transports you into the Dark

Ages with his charcoals, blasted-out golds and pale greens, and there is a

scene with Skarsgård and his army on a wind-swept mound that I wanted to frame

and take home. Thus, as with most Bruckheimer products, one is left with the

cinematic equivalent of fireworks: nice-looking and forgettable.

au3480@wayne.edu
arthistoryguy@aol.com
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X-RT-RatingText: 2/4

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