Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueRichard of Gloucester uses murder and manipulation to claim England's throne.Richard of Gloucester uses murder and manipulation to claim England's throne.Richard of Gloucester uses murder and manipulation to claim England's throne.
Antony Brown
- Sir Richard Ratcliffe
- (as Anthony Brown)
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- AnecdotesThis episode was filmed on the same set as the three Henry VI plays. However, designer Oliver Bayldon altered the set so it would appear to be a ruin, as England reached its lowest point of chaos. In the same vein, the costumes became more and more monotone as the four plays went on; The First Part of Henry the Sixth (1983) features brightly coloured costumes which clearly distinguish the various combatants from one another, but by this point, everyone fights in similarly coloured dark costumes, with little to differentiate one army from another.
- GaffesWhen Henry VI's corpse is borne in on a brier, the Queen laments the passing of her husband. When she removes the sheets, Henry VI's stomach can clearly be seen heaving.
- ConnexionsFeatured in The Story of English: A Muse Of Fire (1986)
Commentaire en vedette
I'm fairly sure that many educated and interested-in-film folk have seen the superb and terrifying McKellen version, but sadly, I'd bet hardly anyone remembers this version, which in the original was the capstone of the cycle of plays that begins with Richard II and continues through the various Henry plays (six of 'em). The series was cast as a whole, and the list of actors is a who's-who of British acting skill, culminating in this horrorshow of a play. From the opening moments, when the camera pulls back from the last frame of Henry VI, Part III to reveal a small blackboard, onto which a disembodied hand scrawls Richard III in chalk, to the final frame, where Margaret sits, cackling hysterically atop a pile of bodies (all the characters killed in the preceding eight plays), this version assaults you and tests your ability to withstand true, and intentional villainy, as personified in the demonic Richard. See this version...plague the BBC with letters asking for it to be reissued...write to the actors and shower them with adulation..whatever it takes to return this play to the public eye, where it richardly belongs. Cheers!
- MarkB-11
- 30 oct. 1999
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What is the broadcast (satellite or terrestrial TV) release date of The Tragedy of Richard III (1983) in Australia?
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