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Overview
User Rating:
Director:
Writers:
Alan Jay Lerner (play)
Alan Jay Lerner (screenplay)
more
Release Date:
25 October 1967 (USA) more
Tagline:
The Most Beautiful Love Story Ever! more
Plot:
The story of the marriage of England's King Arthur to Guinevere is played out amid the pagentry of Camelot... more | add synopsis
Awards:
Won 3 Oscars. Another 4 wins & 6 nominations more
NewsDesk:
(6 articles)
The Fantasticks to Kick Off Long Wharf's 2009-10 Season Oct 7 - Nov 1
(From BroadwayWorld.com. 1 November 2009, 1:30 AM, PST)
Amanda Seyfried And Gael Garcia Bernal Write ‘Letters To Juliet’
(From MTV Movies Blog. 5 June 2009, 7:00 AM, PDT)
User Comments:
"........a fleeting wisp of glory, called Camelot." more (64 total)
Cast
(Complete credited cast)| Richard Harris | ... | King Arthur | |
| Vanessa Redgrave | ... | Guenevere | |
| Franco Nero | ... | Lancelot Du Lac | |
| David Hemmings | ... | Mordred | |
| Lionel Jeffries | ... | King Pellinore | |
| Laurence Naismith | ... | Merlyn | |
| Pierre Olaf | ... | Dap | |
| Estelle Winwood | ... | Lady Clarinda | |
| Gary Marshal | ... | Sir Lionel | |
| Anthony Rogers | ... | Sir Dinadan | |
| Peter Bromilow | ... | Sir Sagramore | |
| Sue Casey | ... | Lady Sybil | |
| Gary Marsh | ... | Tom of Warwick | |
| Nicolas Beauvy | ... | King Arthur as a Boy |
Additional Details
Parents Guide:
Runtime:
179 min | Canada:175 min
Country:
Language:
Color:
Color (Technicolor)
Aspect Ratio:
2.20 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
4-Track Stereo (35 mm prints) | 70 mm 6-Track (70 mm prints)
Certification:
UK:U | Finland:K-8 | Sweden:11 | USA:G | Singapore:PG | Australia:G | Canada:G
Filming Locations:
Alcázar de Segovia, Segovia, Segovia, Castilla y León, Spain more
Company:
Fun Stuff
Trivia:
Franco Nero was cast because he had the right look to play Lancelot. more
Goofs:
Continuity: When Lancelot and Guenevere are in her bedroom on the night Arthur has left the castle to hunt, Guenevere is seen standing by a pillar facing Lancelot as he is approaching her. In the next shot when Lancelot reaches her, she is turned away from him. Later in the scene, Lancelot has his arm around Genevere's neck as they are walking across the room. In the next shot, Mordred jumps out to catch them and they are in the middle of a kiss. more
Quotes:
[first lines]
A Knight:
The rules of battle are not for Lancelot Du Lac, Your Majesty! Let us attack now while they sleep!
King Arthur:
[firmly] We will attack when I give the command - at dawn.
[the knight leaves, and Arthur begins to talk to himself]
King Arthur:
Oh, Merlyn, Merlyn, why is Ginny in that castle, behind walls I cannot enter? How did I blunder into this agonizing absurdity? Where did I stumble? How did I go wrong? Should I not have loved her?
[sighs]
King Arthur:
Then I should not have been born! Oh, Merlyn, I haven't got much time. Within an inch of sunlight, the arrows begin to fly. If I am to die in battle, please, please do not let me die bewildered!
[...]
more
Movie Connections:
Referenced in "Gilmore Girls: Luke Can See Her Face (#4.20)" (2004) more
Soundtrack:
The Simple Joys Of Maidenhood more
FAQ
This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.more (64 total)
Message Boards
Discuss this movie with other users on IMDb message board for Camelot (1967) moreRecommendations
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I wish I had seen the original Broadway production of Camelot. As a lad the Broadway cast album was a treasured staple in our house, played over and over again by my parents. Can you imagine a cast led by Richard Burton, Julie Andrews and introducing Robert Goulet as Lancelot?
So why couldn't Warner Brothers sign the original cast from Broadway for the movie? Robert Goulet had in fact come to Hollywood and didn't set the world on fire, but the other two were already big box office names by 1967. Julie Andrews had won an Oscar for Mary Poppins and just did the Sound of Music. And Richard Burton was one half of the most noted show business couple of the Sixties with his wife Elizabeth Taylor.
Jack Warner, usually a smart guy, said that he didn't think that anyone would believe that two guys like Arthur and Lancelot would put a kingdom at risk for the love of Mary Poppins. So Julie wasn't even asked and Vanessa Redgrave got the call. She's certainly sexy enough, but she opted for the Rex Harrison talk/sing in doing Guinevere. If you have the video or DVD of Camelot play that and then listen to Julie Andrews sing from the original cast album. My favorite song from the score is I Loved You Once In Silence and Julie Andrews is at her best singing that song. Vanessa doesn't come close.
Ditto for Richard Burton and Richard Harris. Though in the case of Harris I think he was toning it down a mite for a clearly handicapped co-star in the vocal department. Harris later in his life toured extensively in various productions of Camelot as Arthur, virtually taking over the role originated by his close friend Burton.
The biggest hit from the Camelot score was If Ever I Would Leave You, sung by Robert Goulet. In 1961 you couldn't get away from that song being played on the radio right in the midst of all the rock and roll. Goulet also toured in various stock companies of Camelot and like both Burton and Harris revived it on Broadway. I don't think anyone ever asked Franco Nero to tour.
But Redgrave and Nero certainly created their own screen magic, they got involved with each other on the set. But folks this is a musical and musically they don't measure up.
David Hemmings takes over the role of Mordred from Roddy McDowall who did it on stage. His Mordred is a clever schemer, but a coward as well. For myself the best Mordred ever portrayed on screen was in Knights of the Round Table by Stanley Baker. Baker's interpretation of Mordred is light years from Hemmings, he's a schemer, but he's definitely no coward.
I love the score of Camelot and when it was filmed I only wish the singing was half as good as the Broadway show.