Here's a movie I remember being excited about when it was announced (King Arthur on the big screen? yay! Digging into possible historical basis? cool!), and then being a bit puzzled with it when it came out. Not quite convinced by it as "King Arthur", but having enjoyed it as a film nonetheless, in great part thanks to its excellent actors (who sadly had to work with some clunky dialogue at times *shudder*).
Diving into it now, because I was looking for something to pop into the dvd player that I hadn't seen in ages, and felt in the mood for some swordplay and horseback riding. 😉
So let's take a closer look at
King Arthur (2004; note: "Director's Edition", and I don't remember enough of the cinematic to point out the differences), directed by
Antoine Fuqua, screenplay by
David Franzoni and produced by
Jerry Bruckheimer (which explains quite a bit... *sigh*) and starring
Clive Owen,
Ioan Gruffudd and
Keira Knightley (in her first post-
Pirates movie I believe; curiously before this she'd done a Robin Hood movie for Disney called
Princess of Thieves which I guess I'll have to watch at some point for this blog!).
Need I say it? SPOILER ALERT for a 2004 movie!
Who is this King Arthur?
Artorius (Arthur) Castus. A half-Roman / half-British (mother) commander of the troops guarding Hadrian's Wall (like his father before him), leader of a unit of
Sarmatian knights who serve Rome fro 15 years. A name apparently already well-known throughout the island (Guinevere tells him
"My father told me great tales of you (...) Fairy tales. The kind you hear about people so brave, so selfless, that they can't be real. Arthur and his knights. A leader both Briton and Roman."). He's a devout Christian, a student of
Pelagius (who is now deemed a heretic by Rome) who believes men have free will and thus are free to choose their own destiny/fate. When he learns that Pelagius is dead and his teachings of equality among men are deemed heretical by Rome, his faith in Rome is shaken (Alecto "
the Rome you believe in does not exist except in your dreams").
Clive Owen does an excellent job of bringing to life a man who is dedicated to his cause (Rome, his men), tired of waging battle and longing for a peaceful life in Rome, who slowly begins to understand himself better as he is forced to confront certain truths about Rome and faces the prospect of the land he has dedicated his life to protecting simply being abandoned to its fate during the Saxon invasion.