Rating: R
Genre:
Fantasy
Release Date: 09/21/1999
SubTitles: English/French
Dubbed: English/French
Sound: DD5.1/DD1
Run Time: 140 Minutes
Flags: Violence, Nudity, Sexual Situations
Distributor/Studio: Warner Home Video
John Boorman directed this gloriously savage interpretation of Arthurian legend loosely based on
Thomas Malory's novel
Le Morte d'Arthur. By turns gleaming and filthy, tender and bloody, the film is a visually stunning
epic which is never less than compelling.
Nigel Terry is perfectly cast as
Arthur, whose unwavering trust and faith are shown to be both quietly heroic and achingly naïve. Interestingly, the quest for the Grail is the least effective part of the film, despite bold cinematography by
Alex Thomson (who was nominated for an Oscar) and a fine performance by
Paul Geoffrey as
Perceval, whose greatest desire is attained in his dying sight. It is the scenes of Camelot in which
Boorman is at his most effective, as
Arthur is betrayed by the burning passions of
Guenevere (
Cherie Lunghi) and
Lancelot (
Nicholas Clay), whose boiling internal forces cannot be denied, whatever the cost. The wicked
Mordred (
Robert Addie) and
Morgana (
Helen Mirren) are commanding when onscreen, and
Nicol Williamson's performance as the grandiosely self-sacrificing
Merlin is outstanding.
Liam Neeson and
Patrick Stewart also appear in this dense, passionate, and stirring triumph featuring a marvelous
Trevor Jones score. The gruesome effects by
Peter Hutchinson and
Alan Whibley, however, and sights such as a knight having sex in full body armor make this a
fairy tale strictly for adults.
~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide