Henry V
Original title: The Chronicle History of King Henry the Fifth with His Battell Fought at Agincourt in France
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
7.4K
YOUR RATING
In the midst of the Hundred Years' War, the young King Henry V of England embarks on the conquest of France in 1415.In the midst of the Hundred Years' War, the young King Henry V of England embarks on the conquest of France in 1415.In the midst of the Hundred Years' War, the young King Henry V of England embarks on the conquest of France in 1415.
- Nominated for 4 Oscars
- 12 wins & 6 nominations total
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe opening model shot of London was huge, 50 feet by 70 feet in size, and made of plaster. It took four months to construct.
- GoofsHenry V's reign was in the early 1400s, but most of the costuming in the film is from 1600, the time of the plays writing, almost 200 years later. The armor on the other hand is accurate. In fact, there is no anachronism in the costumes. The story is told from two points of view (one in the 1600s, as a performance in the Globe Theater; the other in the 1400s, as the characters originally lived). Costumes shift on purpose according to the point of view.
- Quotes
King Henry V of England: Tell the Dauphin his jest will savor but of shallow wit, when thousands weep more than did laugh at it.
- Crazy creditsThe main title not only gives the full title of the play as William Shakespeare wrote it, but spells the words in the 16th-century manner, not in modern spelling.
- Alternate versionsIn the American release of the film, all references to "bastards" in the dialogue were excised.
- ConnectionsEdited into Master of the World (1961)
- SoundtracksAgincourt Hymn (Deo gracias Anglia)
(uncredited)
Latin hymn text set to anonymous tune (1415)
Arranged by William Walton
Featured review
With tensions between England and the arrogant French pushed to breaking point, King Henry the Fifth sets out with his armies to conquer and quell the French in their native land. The film builds up with to the historic battle of Agincourt with the troops and the king camping together and making progress across the land.
Whenever Henry V (to use the shorten title) comes on TV I always tape it simply because I always assume that it is a masterpiece of English cinema such is it's reputation in many circles. However this reputation may not be that well deserved as I have decided from my viewing of it today. The plot is Shakespeare and I will not criticise it, but I know myself that it is not a story that I would pick if asked to chose from his canon of work I prefer the darker stuff or the out and out comedies. That aside the film tells a straightforward tale, here used to raise morale and fly the flag of Britain and England during WWII. As such it works but I needed it to be more than just a flag waving exercise, I wanted more detail and more thought. Such scenes exist within the play but Olivier does not use them as well as he uses the grandstanding speeches and battle scene his focus is not on thought but on scale.
As director he does quite well in early stages and in the actual battle itself. The device of opening ad closing in the playhouse works to good effect and is clever but far too many scenes have poor camera angles or are poorly framed. The battle scene is good but too much of the film is ordinary in terms of looks and style. As actor Olivier carries the King well but is too one dimensional for me and I didn't have to put any thought into him to watch the film. He holds back for much of the film but leaps up for more upbeat scenes or rousing speeches. The support cast all sound natural with the dialogue although some of the roles are a little bit hammy, they still hold the film together well.
Overall this is an enjoyable film that has good spectacle to it and key scenes are very good. However the lack of anything under the surface is a problem and it is one of the lesser Shakespearean adaptations I have seen. Still worth a look but if you're like me, you'll be left wondering `was that it?'
Whenever Henry V (to use the shorten title) comes on TV I always tape it simply because I always assume that it is a masterpiece of English cinema such is it's reputation in many circles. However this reputation may not be that well deserved as I have decided from my viewing of it today. The plot is Shakespeare and I will not criticise it, but I know myself that it is not a story that I would pick if asked to chose from his canon of work I prefer the darker stuff or the out and out comedies. That aside the film tells a straightforward tale, here used to raise morale and fly the flag of Britain and England during WWII. As such it works but I needed it to be more than just a flag waving exercise, I wanted more detail and more thought. Such scenes exist within the play but Olivier does not use them as well as he uses the grandstanding speeches and battle scene his focus is not on thought but on scale.
As director he does quite well in early stages and in the actual battle itself. The device of opening ad closing in the playhouse works to good effect and is clever but far too many scenes have poor camera angles or are poorly framed. The battle scene is good but too much of the film is ordinary in terms of looks and style. As actor Olivier carries the King well but is too one dimensional for me and I didn't have to put any thought into him to watch the film. He holds back for much of the film but leaps up for more upbeat scenes or rousing speeches. The support cast all sound natural with the dialogue although some of the roles are a little bit hammy, they still hold the film together well.
Overall this is an enjoyable film that has good spectacle to it and key scenes are very good. However the lack of anything under the surface is a problem and it is one of the lesser Shakespearean adaptations I have seen. Still worth a look but if you're like me, you'll be left wondering `was that it?'
- bob the moo
- Oct 4, 2003
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Details
Box office
- Budget
- £475,000 (estimated)
- Gross worldwide
- $62,619
- Runtime2 hours 17 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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