Henry VIII

2003 "Heads Will Roll"
7.1| 3h13m| en| More Info
Released: 12 October 2003 Released
Producted By: Power
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Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Synopsis

Henry VIII is a two-part British television movie produced principally by Granada Television for ITV. It chronicles the life of Henry VIII of England from the disintegration of his first marriage to an aging Spanish princess until his death following a stroke in 1547, by which time he had married for the sixth time. Additional production funding was provided by WGBH Boston, Powercorp and the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.

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TinsHeadline Touches You
Fluentiama Perfect cast and a good story
SnoReptilePlenty Memorable, crazy movie
LouHomey From my favorite movies..
ma-cortes Passable but not great rendition based on the life and loves of the famous and lecherous king Henry VIII . A tour de force for Ray Winstone as the robust 16th century ruthless king who loved and killed wives . In 1526 Henry tosses aside his current wife the Spanish Catherine of Aragon played by the Spanish Assumpta Serna. Firstly , Catherine married Arthur , Henry VIII older brother, but Arthur died 6 months later , and Catherine then married Henry . As Henry falls for the young and devastatingly beautiful Anne Boleyn , Helena Bonham Carter . But after the birth of princess Elizabeth , Henry tires of Anne and wishes to marry another, Jane Seymour : Emily Fox . So he decides to rid himself of her presence .Anne was judged and accused of adultery with his brother and four commoners .11 days later Henry married Jane who died 12 days after giving birth to a son , later Edward VI. For political reasons , Henry next selection was Anne of Cleves whom he married by proxy in 154o. She was not to his taste , however , and the marriage was annulled by Parliament 6 months later . Catherine Howard had the misfortune to be Henry' s fifth wife but she was charged with having committed adultery before the marriage. Catherine Parr married and tended the ailing lecher in his last years .Soon after Henry death in 1547 , she married a former lover and died in childbirth.This is a lavish historical spectacle lustily portraying the life and lovers of notorious British Monarch , and shot in Soap style . Ray Winstone's acting as the amoral and womanizer king garned him awesome reviews .Including outstanding performances by the entire cast , such as Emily Blunt as Catherine Howard , Clare Holman as wife Catherine Parr , David Suchet as Cardinal Wolsey, Danny Webb as Thomas Cromwell , Michael Moloney as Thomas Cranmer , Charles Dance as Duke Buckingham and Sean Bean as the rebel Robert Aske. The series was well directed by Pete Travis . He is a good craftsman who has made a lot of films and TV series as Fearless , Falcon, The Jury , Cold Feet , Omagh , Vantage point and Dredd.Henry VIII life has been adapted several times, as TV as Cinema , for example : The private life of Henry VIII by Alexander Korda with Charles Laughton, Merle Oberon , Elsa Lanchaster , Robert Donat ; Anne of the thousand days by Charles Jarrot with Richard Burton, Genevieve Bujold , Vanedsa Redgrave ; The other Boleyn girl with Natalie Portman , Scarlett Johansson , Eric Bana , Jim Sturgess . And series as the starred by Keith Mitchell, Charlotte Rampling , directed by Warris Hussein and the successful starred by Jonathan Rhys Meyers produced by Michael Hirst .
TheLittleSongbird If anything Henry VIII did have some promising things but it was also hugely problematic too. It is true that historians will despair, and already have done, when watching Henry VIII, because history is so distorted to the point that it feels like it'd been rewritten(speaking as a non-historian but as someone who always showed a great interest in the Tudors). And it doesn't fare a huge amount better as a standalone either. As said previously, it does have good things, the best thing being most of the performances. Of the six wives, Assumpta Serna, Clare Holman and particularly Helena Bonham Carter fared best; Serna's Catherine of Aragon is very dignified, Holman doesn't have a huge amount to do but is very touching as Katherine Parr and Bonham Carter, who has the most screen time of the six wives, makes for a witty, shrewish and sometimes moving Anne Boleyn. The supporting cast are even better, with powerful but too brief performances from Charles Dance and particularly Sean Bean, David Suchet playing Wolsey as if born to play him and Mark Strong as a menacing Duke of Norfolk. Henry VIII is well-made as well, it is photographed absolutely beautifully and the costumes and settings are colourful and elegant though the portrayal of the court didn't seem as luxurious as one would like. There are a few good lines, almost all of them from Henry VIII(you have got to love his insult of Anne of Cleves likening her to a horse) and there are some charming moments in the music score with a big shout out to the music for Henry and Anne(Boleyn)'s wedding dance.That's not all to say that all the music works because in the more dramatic moments it did get rather too intrusive. And I did have mixed feelings on Ray Winstone's Henry, him faring much better in the second half than in the first half. As the older Henry Winstone is excellent, in the later parts Henry is very tortured and complex and Winstone does a fine job with that. But for me he fails as the younger Henry, being more cockney Tony Soprano than Henry VIII.Coming onto the flaws, Henry VIII did feel really rushed, after so much time with Catherine and Anne it literally steamrolls through the other four wives, with the way Anne of Cleves was written here she may not as well existed. Most of the acting was fine, but there are roles that suffered from not being very well-written, of the remaining three wives Emilia Fox's Jane Seymour is rather wooden emotionally, Emily Blunt plays Katherine Howard as too much of a nymphomaniac and Pia Girard is completely wasted as Anne of Cleves. Duke of Norfolk and especially Thomas Cromwell seemed written as stock antagonistic caricatures, though it was much more noticeable in Danny Webb's Cromwell than with Strong; to me Strong showed more demeanour and charisma but Webb seemed out of sorts in one of the weaker portrayals of Cromwell. The story has some compelling moments but its fatal mistake is focusing so much on the relationships between Henry and his wives and not properly showing what made him so famous(at most any mention of his or his wives' contributions are explored barely) as well as making a lot of the characters one-dimensional. Another let-down was the script, which again had moments but showed soap-opera at its most melodramatic and the subtlety of an axe(pun intended), Henry and Anne's chemistry and dialogue were far wittier in Anne of the Thousand Days. Henry VIII is also needlessly violent, of course any executions unmistakably brutal but Henry VIII goes overkill on the gratuitous factor, particularly badly done were those of the inept executioner and that for Katherine Howard(how Katherine is written in this scene is embarrassing). It also shows Henry VIII as a wife-beater and a rapist which only succeeded in vilifying his character and possibly distorting history more.Overall, Henry VIII impressed in some areas but it frustrated in other areas as well, didn't hate it but didn't love it either. 5/10 Bethany Cox
aceellaway2010 Fatally flawed by miscasting of Title Character. Ray Winstone, may be very good playing an Eastender drunk. But Henry Vlll for all his many flaws, was a well educated, well read good looking King. This henry comes across as a small time, crude, cockney thug. I imagine that anyone who would watch this , would do so because they have some knowledge of history. I despise Henry Vlll , he murdered wives, friends, anyone who got in his way, and he did so with the power of an absolute monarch. But this miscasting is so bad that it is offensive, and one wonders who chose Winstone to play the character, whoever it was they should suffer the same fate of many of Henry's victims.
wgkyle There is no doubt whatsoever that the producers of this work have taken extreme liberties in the telling of the story, and employed a few outright falsehoods. Nevertheless, if one is able to leave behind expectations for a true-to-the-books account, it is a fun show to watch.Bad Things: Some of the costumes were not great, but there were also some that were spot-on for the period; the armour was atrocious, and the jousting pretty hokey (coming from someone who's done it before). And I certainly don't think Henry was as pliable and weak-willed as he is made out to be. The dissolution of the monasteries wasn't nearly so bloody and violent (another reviewer correctly described it as looking like a scene out of a viking rape-and-pillage film).Good Things: I think the acting was superb, especially from the supporting cast: Cranmer, Cromwell, Wolsey, Gardiner, Robert Aske. And speaking of Aske, for all the inaccuracies in the movie it is the only one that has given the Pilgrimage of Grace the incredibly significant role it actually played during Henry's reign; the details of the Pilgrimage are far too complicated to go into here, but even though much of the details were abbreviated or changed, the very fact that the producers gave a nod to this important event went a long way with me. Suffice to say that Henry's rule could have been swamped and swept away by the Pilgrimage, something Henry and his contemporaries were well aware of and was a consideration which guided their domestic policies for many years afterwards. The movie was limited by the length it could be to go into details concerning the 36-year reign of the monarch, and understandably had to 'pick its battles'. As such, it did leave a lot out about the religious crisis and split with Rome, as well as the effects of religious turmoil on the political situation at home and abroad. If they'd had another 4 hours, they could have covered more things to a greater extent, but most folks have trouble sitting through a ninety-minute movie.Overall, a worth watching but don't expect a history lesson. Besides, we need to worry about anyone who DOES expect a history lesson from a movie...