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1.9 KiB
Plaintext
Having read "the knights of the round table" as a child, and "Le Morte D'Artur" in old English as an adult, I have always been profoundly touched by this story of rise, fall, love, hate, betrayal and hope. As a result, I have developed an intense dislike for most pathetic attempts to put this story on film.<br /><br />Excalibur is the first, and so far, the only film, in my opinion, to come very close to the brass ring.<br /><br />First some ranting.<br /><br />The early film with Cornel Wilde was a swashbuckling story, no more.<br /><br />The Disney cartoon "sword in the stone" was one of the first in a long series of extremely offensive attempts to take inspirational and tragic stories and turn them into something banal.(Anastasia, The hunch Back of Notre Dame to name a couple)<br /><br />First knight was perfect for displaying Richard Geere's lack of talent, and wasting a perfectly good actor (Connery). This ranks up there with "Plan nine from outer space"<br /><br />Excalibur has put faces to the characters I read about. It infused them with personalities, and gave them life beyond the pages.<br /><br />I was transposed by Merlin's magic on the mountain top, awakening the dragon. I felt a strange elation when Arthur drew the sword, one of the most meaningful and defining moments in literary, and now movie, history. I trembled and rejoiced when Arthur handed Excalibur to Uriens and was knighted. And my eyes welled up with tears when the ship took his body away to Avalon<br /><br />And the music... That glorious music, never intrusive, but always suggestive and underlining the drama subtly.<br /><br />After seeing this movie, anyone hearing Carl Orff Carmina Burana's Deres Luna will forever associate it with courage, rebirth sacrifice and redemption.<br /><br />Anyone seeing this movie will be moved to believing that one day Arthur may indeed return to redeem us all. It tells us that hope never dies. |