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Excalibur

Director John Boorman’s passionate adaptation of Sir Thomas Malory’s LE MORTE D’ARTHUR stars Nigel Terry as the faithful King Arthur. Necromancer Merlin (Nicol Williamson) offers the magic sword Excalibur to the warlike Uther Pendragon (Gabriel Byrne) in exchange for a promise that he’ll make peace with his enemy, the duke of Cornwall (Corin Redgrave). He agrees but breaks his word after catching sight of Cornwall’s wife, Igraine (Katrine Boorman). With the magician’s help he makes love to the woman in the guise of her husband. She bears a child, Arthur, who is taken by Merlin as payment for his assistance and left in the care of Ector (Clive Swift). Years pass, and the boy, now a humble squire, pulls Excalibur from the stone in which Uther had sunk it–a task no other could accomplish. With Merlin’s counsel, he marries the stunning Guenevere (Cherie Lunghi), finds a champion in Sir Lancelot (Nicholas Clay), subdues the skirmishing knights, and builds the Round Table to unite them. Yet his half-sister, Morgana (Helen Mirren), lurks in the shadows, preparing to poison her brother’s reign. Perhaps the best film made in this genre, EXCALIBUR benefits from an extraordinary cast, including appearances by Byrne, Patrick Stewart, and Liam Neeson early in their celluloid careers. Counterpointing ethereally filtered sex scenes against scenes of graphic blood-and-guts swordplay, Boorman’s sumptuous production galvanizes the familiar mythology, as he charts the transition from an age of magic to one of reason.This lush retelling of the legend of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table is a dark and engrossing tale. Director John Boorman (Deliverance) masterfully handles the tale of the mythical sword Excalibur, and its passing from the wizard Merlin to the future king of England. Arthur pulls the famed sword from a stone and is destined to be crowned king. As the king embarks on a passionate love affair with Guenevere, an illegitimate son, and Merlin’s designs on power, threaten Arthur’s reign. The film is visually stunning and unflinching in its scenes of combat and black magic. Featuring an impressive supporting cast, including early work from the likes of Liam Neeson and Gabriel Byrne, Excalibur is an adaptation of the legend both faithful and bold. –Robert Lane

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5 Comments
  • Anonymous
    March 5, 2010
    #1
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    I have read the above reviews and find it very hard to believe I watched the same movie as the others. I found it to be horribly filmed, with a B movie flavor!

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  • Anonymous
    March 5, 2010
    #2
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    A swift massacre of beauty’s rooting, one hour into Painbath, one’s eyes will become one with the Not.

    Soon, you realize, each swordthrust has been born in your artery, bleeding the only dependance.

    It’s value attempts a visual supplement, but its own mockery is not even traced sufficiently for the overseeing mythlover.

    I’m not sure where these other reviewers find home, but clearly there a cry is not equivalent to a leavedrop, nor a tree ancestor to Language.

    Clearly there Myrddin is crossed in agony, not even sufficiently graphed in pain, supplanted by a garish screen.

    Meanwhile, Brythonic tree roots still utter words, though muffled and misunderstood.

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  • S. Zipper
    March 5, 2010
    #3
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    Some years ago I got dragged to see this movie. The next day I mentioned to my boss I had just seen what might be the worst movie ever made. His reply was that no, he had been forced to sit through the worst he had ever seen, mine couldn’t be as bad. To make a long story short, we had both seen Excalibur.

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  • shortygryffindor@hotmail.com
    March 5, 2010
    #4
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    I’m a big fan of the Arthurian Legends and this movie hurts me deep down.I kept thinking this would be a great movie and my mythology teacher even praised it before letting the class watch most of it but guess what folks?It seems my mythology teacher is just stupid!!!The people in my class were either making fun of the movie,sleeping or doing their homework because the movie seemed so lame.I tried to watch it but the facts weren’t 100% correct as I was expecting,the actors were terrible and don’t get me starting on the “dazzling effects and time” that they put into this movie.If you’re bored one day then I dare you to try and watch this movie,otherwise forget it.The only good part of this movie was the character Morganna or Morgan le Fay as we normally call her.

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  • Stanley M. Gilbert
    March 5, 2010
    #5
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    Hamy, melodramatic, gratuitously violent, plotless, self-indulgent, historically ridiculous, and over long. I’ve tried to watch this teapot boiler once every decade and it still remains a crushing bore. If there had been advanced video games in the early 80′s it should have been one. Cannot fathom what fans see in this thing other than middle earth fever for anything, and I mean anything, that smacks of sword and sorcery. A real clunker.

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