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Arthur
tale adds much
King
Arthur
Stars
Clive Owen, Stephen Dillane, Keira Knightley, Ioann Gruffudd, Stellan
Skarsgard, Ray Winstone, Hugh Dancey, Schweiger and Joel Edgerton.
Rated M.
Reviewer: LT Simone Heyer
Rating:
IMAGINE
being the son in your family (for some of you that won’t be hard).
Then imagine being plucked from your family as a child, and riding
off into the sunset with a bunch of burly Romans to be a hired gun
for the next 15 years.
Sure, the story of King Arthur is a myth, but this is how Lancelot
(Gruffudd) came to be one of the knights of the Round Table.
Arthur (Owen) – who’s not yet the King – and his knights protect
Roman interests in England from Merlin’s Woads (the indigenous population).
They’re well-known in the region for being cold-hearted killers,
who, despite their small number, can whop the nastiest crowd.
Shoot forward a few years and the pagan knights are at the end of
their tenure.
They’re about to get discharged from the Roman forces when they
are asked to do one more mission as a special favour to the Pope.
Arthur is disgusted, but soon the group saddles up to do Rome’s
bidding one more time and we know that it’s going to be the end
of the line for most of them.
As Arthur approaches Hadrian’s Wall from the south, the Saxons are
closing in from the north and there begins the cat-and-mouse pursuit
for Britain.
Along the way we meet Woad Guinevere (Knightley), who’s feisty enough
to charm the knights, and brave enough to back them up on the battlefield.
Now King Arthur isn’t your usual Jerry Bruckheimer-style all-singing,
all-dancing Hollywood blockbuster.
It has a modest-budget feel that think brings more class and authority
to the film. It’s not one of those films that is made great because
of special effects.
The cast is fantastic – all the Knights are low-level on the fame
scale and are perfect in the battlehardened knight role. Australian
Joel Edgerton, who plays Gawain, was made for the part.
He’s knight through and through. His laid-back-yet-rugged look makes
him very believable. Keira Knightley proved her action- history
genre prowess with Pirates of the Caribbean.
At least King Arthur she gets to wield some weapons.
King Arthur is a great movie, though quite long at 125 minutes.
It explores the myth of the legend without being a cash-filled epic,
and is thoroughly believable.
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