Maggers Wrote:I just saw the incomparable "A Man For All Seasons" again. I saw it in the theater in 1966 when it first came out. What a wonderous script, so literate and so profound. It's all about an honorable man for whom words MEAN something, who argued his fate with wit, immense wisdom and knowledge of the law and the word of the law. It's inspiring and moving, and it's the dialogue that does it. I doubt they could make a movie like this today. It's just too heady.
It won a lot of Oscars: for best film, direction, actor, costume, adapted screenplay, etc. etc.
Ken Valentine Wrote:Sad to say, I have never seen that film. But from what I remember, it was about a power struggle between the Archbishop of Canterbury and King Henry the VIII.
From what you say about it, I'm definitely going to have to look for it . . . and soon!
Ken V.
Maggers Wrote:I just saw the incomparable "A Man For All Seasons" again. I saw it in the theater in 1966 when it first came out. What a wonderous script, so literate and so profound. It's all about an honorable man for whom words MEAN something, who argued his fate with wit, immense wisdom and knowledge of the law and the word of the law. It's inspiring and moving, and it's the dialogue that does it. I doubt they could make a movie like this today. It's just too heady.
It won a lot of Oscars: for best film, direction, actor, costume, adapted screenplay, etc. etc.
Maggers Wrote:It's about Sir Thomas More and his refusal to bow to the wishes of King Henry VIII around his first divorce and subsequent marriage to Anne Boleyn, and how Cromwell tried everything he could think of to get More to betray his beliefs. More didn't and he paid the highest price for his principles.
Ken Valentine Wrote:That's pretty much what I meant by "power struggle," the Church versus the King. I think we're saying the same thing with different words.
I hope the local Blockbuster has it. I'm going to look for it tonight.
Ken V.
Maggers Wrote:I think you'll like it. Robert Shaw plays a very blustery and LOUD King Henry. But Paul Scofield steals the show as Sir Thomas More. Wendy Hiller as Sir Thomas' wife is spirited also, as is a very young John Hurt.
Ken Valentine Wrote:Now I really have to see it.
I remember Robert Shaw from a number of movies -- Force Ten From Navaronne, From Russia With Love, The Sting . . . others that don't come to mind at the moment. He'd make a marvelous Henry the VIII.
The only movie I have seen Paul Scofield in was John Frankenheimers The Train. He played the German Colonel opposite Burt Lancaster. A very impressive actor. Burt Lancaster was good too.
Yep. I definitely have to see this movie. Especially after all this time.
Ken V.