The King

The King

2019140 min
7.2/10
DramaHistoryWar

Plot Summary

England, 15th century. Hal, a capricious prince who lives among the populace far from court, is forced by circumstances to reluctantly accept the throne and become Henry V.

▶️Watch Now

Official trailer from TMDB

👥Cast (37)

Timothée Chalamet

Timothée Chalamet

Hal

Joel Edgerton

Joel Edgerton

Falstaff

Sean Harris

Sean Harris

William

Tom Glynn-Carney

Tom Glynn-Carney

Hotspur

Lily-Rose Depp

Lily-Rose Depp

Catherine

Thomasin McKenzie

Thomasin McKenzie

Philippa, Queen of Denmark

Robert Pattinson

Robert Pattinson

The Dauphin

Ben Mendelsohn

Ben Mendelsohn

King Henry IV

Andrew Havill

Andrew Havill

Archbishop of Canterbury

Dean-Charles Chapman

Dean-Charles Chapman

Thomas

Steven Elder

Steven Elder

Dorset

Edward Ashley

Edward Ashley

Cambridge

🎬Crew

Director

David Michôd

Writers

David Michôd, Joel Edgerton

Producers

Jeremy Kleiner, Joel Edgerton, David Michôd, Liz Watts, Brad Pitt

🖼️Gallery (14 images)

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🏷️Keywords

biographyhundred years' warhistorical fictionbritish historymentor protégé relationshipking of englandcostume drama15th centurybritish monarchymedieval englandfather son relationshipmedieval france

💬Reviews (3)

S

Splinter

11/11/2019

Just finished The King, a modern interpretation of parts of Shakespeare's Henry IV and Henry V, seemingly targeted at millennials. It's common knowledge that much of Shakespeare's Henry V is based on hearsay, yet his pre-battle speeches at Barfleur ('Once more unto the breach, dear friends, once more.') and Agincourt ('We band of brothers') have become the stuff of legend and remain the most stirring battle speeches of our time. In The King, Henry's pre-battle speech at Agincourt is neither stirring or inspirational due to being a watered-down, 21st-century, politically correct rendition, which I found hard to stomach. The King portrays Henry (Hal) as a pacifist and reluctant leader, a fop to Catherine of Valois and I found Timothee Chalomet's (an American) performance as Hal to be too 21st century and not in the slightest bit convincing. In fact, he seemed reluctant to carry out any of the deeds that the real Henry V actually carried out. The battle scenes were very realistic and the cinematography was superb, but... This is yet another nod to the PC millennials, diluting and revising both Shakespeare and history into easily digestible snack bites for the sensitive of our era.

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R

Roryyeung

10/4/2022

It’s a fine half-adaptation, but suffers from the compromise it makes. On the one hand, it is not simply another adaptation of Shakespeare - it has the advantages of taking a fresh look at the material, but for whatever reason still somehow carried across much of the fictional elements of Shakespeare’s plays. At the same time, whilst the writing is good, it lacks the poetry of a more straight adaptation (e.g. the Hollow Crown). I do find the performances to be compelling, and in particular, find it interesting to see Henry V as a contemplative humanist rather than a victorious warlord. It’s an interesting idea (if perhaps ahistoric) and does perhaps act as a medication on more modern conflicts. In particular, the film diverges significantly from Shakespeare’s plot significantly towards the end. It seems to try to this to change to modify the original 16th century propaganda of the play to a discussion of Realpolitik. This is a good idea in principle, but is somewhat undercut from having just watched an hour glorifying Henry. It is also technically impressive - both the art and cinematography departments have outdone themselves - standards we have perhaps come to expect from Netflix productions. On the whole, I admire the attempt to give a fresh take on the source material, but would rather they took inspiration from the history, rather than from a play written centuries after.

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C

CinemaSerf

5/30/2024

At last an opportunity to see Timothée Chalamet doing something a little grittier. Sadly, t'was not to be. His portrayal of this great character from early 15th Century British history left me cold. He looked like a good meal would have killed him, never mind a bloodthirsty foe clad in iron armed with an axe. The accent held up reasonably well, but he still struggles to shake off the winsome, "butter wouldn't melt" image and as he has to pretty much carry this film en seul, it just doesn't really work. The rare appearances by Robert Pattinson border on the hammy; with his final appearance reminding me of the first few steps taken by "Bambi" back in 1942. It is great that Netflix are prepared to fund projects like this, but the plain truth is that no amount of money can compensate for a poor screenplay - think Shakespeare "light" - supplemented with a few high-profile cameo contributions and some, admittedly, fantastic battle scenarios.

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Production Companies

Plan B Entertainment
Porchlight Films
Blue-Tongue Films