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Overview
User Rating:
Director:
Writer (WGA):
David Franzoni (written by)
Release Date:
7 July 2004 (USA) more
Tagline:
Rule Your Fate more
Plot:
A demystified take on the tale of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table. full summary | add synopsis
Awards:
3 wins & 7 nominations more
NewsDesk:
(155 articles)
Dff: An Evening With Ed Harris
(From Cinematical. 14 November 2009, 4:27 PM, PST)
Clive Owen: The Hollywood Interview
(From The Hollywood Interview. 4 November 2009, 12:49 PM, PST)
User Comments:
It's all about atmosphere more (840 total)
Cast
(Cast overview, first billed only)| Clive Owen | ... | Arthur | |
| Ioan Gruffudd | ... | Lancelot | |
| Mads Mikkelsen | ... | Tristan | |
| Joel Edgerton | ... | Gawain | |
| Hugh Dancy | ... | Galahad | |
| Ray Winstone | ... | Bors | |
| Ray Stevenson | ... | Dagonet | |
| Keira Knightley | ... | Guinevere | |
| Stephen Dillane | ... | Merlin | |
| Stellan Skarsgård | ... | Cerdic | |
| Til Schweiger | ... | Cynric | |
| Sean Gilder | ... | Jols | |
| Pat Kinevane | ... | Horton | |
| Ivano Marescotti | ... | Bishop Germanius | |
| Ken Stott | ... | Marius Honorius |
Additional Details
Also Known As:
King Arthur: Director's Cut (USA) (DVD title (director's cut))
Knights of the Roundtable (USA) (working title)
more
MPAA:
Rated PG-13 for intense battle sequences, a scene of sensuality and some language.
Parents Guide:
Runtime:
126 min | USA:142 min (director's cut)
Language:
English | Latin | Irish Gaelic | Welsh | Scottish Gaelic
Color:
Aspect Ratio:
2.35 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
DTS | Dolby Digital | SDDS
Certification:
Canada:13+ (Quebec) (director's cut) | Canada:G (Quebec) | Iceland:16 | Netherlands:16 (director's cut) | Malaysia:18PL | Malaysia:U (cut version) | Australia:M (Video rating) | USA:PG-13 (original rating) (certificate #40970) | Canada:G (re-rating) | New Zealand:M | Spain:18 (DVD rating) | Sweden:11 | Argentina:13 | Australia:MA (director's cut) | Australia:M (original rating) | Canada:14A (director's cut) | Chile:14 | Czech Republic:12 | Finland:K-11 (original rating) | Finland:K-15 (director's cut) | France:U (director's cut) | Germany:12 (original rating) | Germany:16 (director's cut) | Ireland:15 | Netherlands:12 | Norway:15 | Peru:14 | Philippines:PG-13 | Singapore:PG | South Korea:15 | Spain:13 (director's cut) | Spain:7 | Switzerland:12 (canton of Geneva) | Switzerland:12 (canton of Vaud) | UK:12A (original rating) | UK:12 (video rating) (2004) | UK:15 (director's cut) | USA:Open (director's cut) (rating surrendered) | USA:R (director's cut) | Greece:K-13 | Brazil:14
Filming Locations:
Ardmore Studios - Herbert Road, Bray, County Wicklow, Ireland more
Company:
Fun Stuff
Trivia:
Although the weather seems very cold and dreary, the movie was shot during near-record high temperatures in Ireland. more
Goofs:
Continuity: Despite the fact that it's supposed to be winter, there are leaves on the trees. more
Quotes:
[first lines]
Lancelot:
[voiceover] By 300 AD, the Roman Empire extended from Arabia to Britain. But they wanted more. More land. More peoples loyal and subservient to Rome. But no people so important as the powerful Sarmatians to the east. Thousands died on that field. And when the smoke cleared on the fourth day...
[...]
more
Movie Connections:
References "Babylon 5" (1994) more
Soundtrack:
Tell Me Now (What You See) more
FAQ
What are the differences between the Theatrical version and the Unrated Director's Cut?more
more (840 total)
Message Boards
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Jerry Bruckheimer's KING ARTHUR is a shining example of that new breed of mythology adaption. It is similar to Wolfgang Petersen's TROY, in that it dispenses with the supernatural splendour and phantasmagorical intrigue characteristic of traditional tales, and presents the story as (relatively) realistic historical fiction, attempting to convey the "magic" of the story through drama, rather than gaudy special effects.
This is a brave venture by Bruckheimer - and director Fuqua- and they are to be commended for executing it with such style and creativity as is displayed in this film. It has, however, enjoyed somewhat limited success, due to the fact that it presents such a radical interpretation of a story much closer to our hearts than that of the Illiad.
I believe, though, that if the viewer simply opens one's mind and attempts to enjoy the story purely for the sake of itself (forgetting, for the moment, Rosemary Sutcliff and Barbara Leonie Picard), KING ARTHUR will reveal itself as a truly fine piece of film-making.
More than anything else, Fuqua masterfully portrays the atmosphere of the tale, endowing it with a sense of time and place far more eloquent than the rather run-of-the-mill dialogue. The entire experience oozes the ambiance of the early common era, from windswept downs and hills to rugged coasts and snow-cloaked mountains; from the spartan order of a Roman camp to the hellish confines of a torture chamber. Exemplars of this perfectly-presented atmosphere are Arthur's knights(Ioan Gruffud, Ray Winstone, Joel Edgerton, Mads Mikkelsen, Hugh Dancy and Ray Stevenson).These are not the chivalrous, couth, pious Christian knights your mum told you about, but rather a troop of barbaric, lecherous, pagan Sarmatian mercenaries. Together (with excellent performances all round, particularly by Winstone, Gruffud and Edgerton) they epitomise the pragmatic, godless, exquisitely human atmosphere of the period. As Gawaine tells a cowering Roman friar in an early scene - "Your God doesn't live here".
The lead actors, too, are outstanding, from Stellan Skarsgaard's sociopathic Cerdic, to the delicious Keira Knightley's dark and beautiful Guinevere. Only Clive Owen disappoints as Arthur himself, lacking the emotion this characterisation requires to supplement his steely resolve.
Despite the lukewarm reception to which it was subjected, KING ARTHUR is a finely crafted and memorable item of film-making. Forget all your preconceptions about King Arthur - just float with it, and let the rich atmosphere engulf you. 9/10.