Alors qu'Alfred le Grand défend son royaume contre les envahisseurs nordiques, Uhtred, né saxon mais élevé par les Vikings, cherche à revendiquer son droit ancestral.Alors qu'Alfred le Grand défend son royaume contre les envahisseurs nordiques, Uhtred, né saxon mais élevé par les Vikings, cherche à revendiquer son droit ancestral.Alors qu'Alfred le Grand défend son royaume contre les envahisseurs nordiques, Uhtred, né saxon mais élevé par les Vikings, cherche à revendiquer son droit ancestral.
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- 6 nominations au total
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Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe family name of the author's birth father was Oughtred and he is descended from the Saxons who took the name Uhtred. They had owned Bebbanburg (now Bamburgh Castle in Northumberland) and held it through the Danish invasion and occupation of northern Britain
- GaffesIt is incorrectly stated that the Danes would only use the raven symbol on flags and other objects. It is well-known that Norse warriors would use different symbols from tribe to tribe, much like a coat of arms or a family crest.
- ConnexionsFeatured in History Buffs: Vikings Historical Accuracy and Season 4 (2016)
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Right from the start, The Last Kingdom throws you into the thick of it: a noble kid gets kidnapped by Vikings and grows up as a cross between Ragnar Lodbrok and a British aristocrat. Uhtred is the guy stuck juggling two worlds, like an episode of Kaamelott rewritten by Bernard Cornwell. Raised by barbarians, destined to serve the Saxons-this dude hit the jackpot of misfortune, and honestly, it's glorious watching him struggle.
We're talking Vikings, English kings, and epic battles, but the show spares you a boring PowerPoint presentation. Instead, it serves up places, dates, names, and improbable mustaches, all wrapped in a series that tricks you into thinking you're brushing up on your history. Yes, Alfred the Great was real, and no, Uhtred doesn't show up in history books. But let's be honest: this fictional guy is the missing link between William Wallace and Tony Stark.
If you're into battles louder than a karaoke night after three pints, The Last Kingdom is your holy grail. Warriors trade leather Viking jackets for gory axe wounds, filmed like a medieval Doom Eternal. The action doesn't reinvent the wheel, but it delivers visceral combat scenes that keep you glued to your seat-reminding you that Saxons couldn't form a proper battle line to save their lives.
Alexander Dreymon as Uhtred? He's got the looks of a heartthrob but the demeanor of someone repeatedly dying in Dark Souls. He carries the show like a berserker lugging a shield. Alongside him, the supporting cast oozes credibility: fragile kings, badass queens, and priests nastier than a The Witcher 3 final boss. They add depth, even if a few look like they wandered in from a half-baked cosplay contest.
Uhtred's eternal dilemma-team Ragnarök or team God Save the King-is the heart of the show. Torn between his Viking upbringing and his Saxon destiny, it's like choosing between Game of Thrones and Vikings: you don't want to pick a side. This duality fuels the series' dramatic tension, hooking you like a Nordic fish on a barbed hook.
The Last Kingdom is a medieval slap in the face, reminding you that history isn't just dates and wars. It's about people like Uhtred, caught between two cultures yet still finding time to drop lines sharper than Jean-Pierre Coffe with a battle axe. If you've missed this, you've skipped the best mix of action, drama, and axes since Braveheart. There, I said it.
We're talking Vikings, English kings, and epic battles, but the show spares you a boring PowerPoint presentation. Instead, it serves up places, dates, names, and improbable mustaches, all wrapped in a series that tricks you into thinking you're brushing up on your history. Yes, Alfred the Great was real, and no, Uhtred doesn't show up in history books. But let's be honest: this fictional guy is the missing link between William Wallace and Tony Stark.
If you're into battles louder than a karaoke night after three pints, The Last Kingdom is your holy grail. Warriors trade leather Viking jackets for gory axe wounds, filmed like a medieval Doom Eternal. The action doesn't reinvent the wheel, but it delivers visceral combat scenes that keep you glued to your seat-reminding you that Saxons couldn't form a proper battle line to save their lives.
Alexander Dreymon as Uhtred? He's got the looks of a heartthrob but the demeanor of someone repeatedly dying in Dark Souls. He carries the show like a berserker lugging a shield. Alongside him, the supporting cast oozes credibility: fragile kings, badass queens, and priests nastier than a The Witcher 3 final boss. They add depth, even if a few look like they wandered in from a half-baked cosplay contest.
Uhtred's eternal dilemma-team Ragnarök or team God Save the King-is the heart of the show. Torn between his Viking upbringing and his Saxon destiny, it's like choosing between Game of Thrones and Vikings: you don't want to pick a side. This duality fuels the series' dramatic tension, hooking you like a Nordic fish on a barbed hook.
The Last Kingdom is a medieval slap in the face, reminding you that history isn't just dates and wars. It's about people like Uhtred, caught between two cultures yet still finding time to drop lines sharper than Jean-Pierre Coffe with a battle axe. If you've missed this, you've skipped the best mix of action, drama, and axes since Braveheart. There, I said it.
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- 16:9 HD
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