The lion in winter - Nel regno del crimine
Titolo originale: The Lion in Winter
- Film per la TV
- 2003
- 2h 47min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,9/10
2497
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaKing Henry II meets with Eleanor of Aquitaine at Christmastide 1183 to choose one of his sons as his successor.King Henry II meets with Eleanor of Aquitaine at Christmastide 1183 to choose one of his sons as his successor.King Henry II meets with Eleanor of Aquitaine at Christmastide 1183 to choose one of his sons as his successor.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Vincitore di 1 Primetime Emmy
- 7 vittorie e 21 candidature totali
6,92.4K
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Recensioni in evidenza
Like watching a new version of `Streetcar'
It's refreshing to see a new take on a familiar work. But when the original is a legend, the new interpretation often seems wanting. So it is with this `Lion in Winter.' You want it to succeed, but
you hear the actors speak their lines, & ache for the brilliant readings of the earlier film. You respect capable actors like Close & Stewart, but yearn for the inspired pyrotechnics of Hepburn and O'Toole. All actors admirably give performances quite distinct from those of the '68 film-but only Jonathan Rhys-Meyers gives one at least as impressive as his earlier counterpart. His spoiled, manipulative, bisexual man-boy is a fascinating Philip.
This `Lion in Winter' is enjoyable, but pales in inevitable comparison to the first version. If nothing else, it will make you treasure its superb predecessor all the more.
This `Lion in Winter' is enjoyable, but pales in inevitable comparison to the first version. If nothing else, it will make you treasure its superb predecessor all the more.
Worth seeing, some parts better than the original
I enjoyed this. Though not quite up to the standard of the original it was still much better than many films. The script is still fast and witty. The production quality is not so high, they obviously did not have the same kind of budget as last time which shows occasionally in the sound and music quality. But this does not spoil ones enjoyment.
Prince John was not acted as well as last time but Henry's mistress (can't remember her name) was much better. In the original I could not see why Henry would be so taken by her - this girl was much more fascinating. The scenes between Henry (Patrick) and her were convincing.
I thought Patrick Stewart and Glen Close hit sparks off one another.
I could believe in these two as ex-husband and wife.
The French King was very different from the Timothy Dalton version but good in his own way.
Worth seeing and interesting to compare it with the original.
Prince John was not acted as well as last time but Henry's mistress (can't remember her name) was much better. In the original I could not see why Henry would be so taken by her - this girl was much more fascinating. The scenes between Henry (Patrick) and her were convincing.
I thought Patrick Stewart and Glen Close hit sparks off one another.
I could believe in these two as ex-husband and wife.
The French King was very different from the Timothy Dalton version but good in his own way.
Worth seeing and interesting to compare it with the original.
Inferiority triumphs
This movie is a rarity: a remake that is inferior to the original in every single aspect. Not only is every actor inferior (even the minor ones). Not only are the direction, sets, music, photography, etc. inferior. Not only do the few changes to the screenplay weaken the production. The remarkable achievement of this film is that every single *line* of dialogue makes one long for the original.
No humor!
This version of Lion in Winter, aside from being horrible, also failed to convey any of the humor from the original movie or play.
There's plenty of dark humor in the original movie and play, but the actors and director took it all way too seriously, missing all of it in the script.
The lines were there, they just blew them.
Patrick Stewart and Glenn Close are no substitute for Peter O'Toole and Katharine Hepburn.
All this version did for me was make me want to watch the 1968 version.
Thumbs down.
There's plenty of dark humor in the original movie and play, but the actors and director took it all way too seriously, missing all of it in the script.
The lines were there, they just blew them.
Patrick Stewart and Glenn Close are no substitute for Peter O'Toole and Katharine Hepburn.
All this version did for me was make me want to watch the 1968 version.
Thumbs down.
Kudos to Patrick Stewart, and pretty darned "close," Glenn!
Setting aside the question of 'Why do we need a remake of an almost perfect original?' I was very pleased with this movie. Credit it, if you will, to Stewart's resonant, commanding voice, but I thought he more than held his own against O'Toole's Henry. Less pomp, more circumstance. Regarding Eleanor, well - nothing could ever top the great Kate's performance in the original movie. Considering the impossibility of doing so, though, I have to say that Glenn Close did a more than admirable job with the role. Indeed, in a couple of scenes when she was talking but the camera wasn't on her face you could almost imagine you were hearing Hepburn! Overall, Close's Eleanor was less bitter and acerbic than Hepburn's, but it was still a most valid interpretation of the character. Re: the sons - I didn't care much for Howard's interpretation of Richard more smarmy posturing rather than the Machiavellian swagger of entitlement that I feel the part calls for (i.e., Anthony Hopkins' portrayal.) But, the characters of Geoffrey and John were cast better in this one, in my opinion, than in the original. Rafe Spall played John's blithering, namby-pamby, spoiled brat to perfection. Also, the sets were wonderful! Big thumbs up.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizPatrick Stewart previously played Henry's son, Richard the Lionheart, in Robin Hood - Un uomo in calzamaglia (1993).
- BlooperEleanor refers to syphilis in one of her speeches, an impossibility in 1183 England. Syphilis was not named such until 1530 by Hieronymus Fracastorius. Regardless of whether Europe even had the disease prior to 1200, it could not have been known by that name to the Queen.
- Citazioni
John: He has a knife, a knife!
Eleanor of Aquitaine: Of course he has a knife! I have a knife. We all have knives. It's 1183 and we're all barbarians!
- ConnessioniFeatured in The 56th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards (2004)
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