Guy Ritchie is that fun friend whose texts you don’t always return because his energy màn chơi is always cranked up khổng lồ 10, & even when you’re in the mood for him, he still wears you out. His best entertainments are 1990s lad mag confections, chock full of funny, well-dressed, hardboiled men (and a couple of women) who bust each other’s chops when they aren’t joining forces to lớn steal something. They’re the kinds of films you forget exist until you stumble across them & end up watching the whole thing again because the tone is just right—edgy but lighthearted—and never for a moment does the movie pretend that watching it is going to make you a better person. “Lock, Stock & Two Smoking Barrels,” his two Sherlock Holmes films, “Snatch,” the bizarre self-help action film “Revolver” và 2015’s unexpectedly marvelous “The Man from U.N.C.L.E.” are assortments of savory treats presented in the most stylish boxes Ritchie can devise.

Bạn đang xem: King arthur: legend of the sword

But there are times when Ritchie makes his own style the star of the film, crowding out the actors and the story because neither is terribly interesting. The result is an oxymoron: a frenetic slog. That’s unfortunately what happens lớn “King Arthur: Legend of the Sword,” a knowingly anachronistic riff on the legend starring Charlie Hunnam. This version envisions Arthur as a working-class hero with entirely contemporary sensibilities. He was raised in a brothel after his father and mother were murdered by his uncle Vortigern (Jude Law). Vortigern is an unworthy King of England and a pampered sadist who owes a supernatural debt to lớn the Lady of the Lake, envisioned here as a mass of CGI tentacles enfolding three women, one plump và the others slender and curvy. 

Ritchie & his cowriters, Lionel Wigram & Joby Harold, aren’t interested in historical fidelity because the historical Arthur was a mystery anyway và they’re mainly having fun here. They take Arthur’s childhood trauma seriously (he keeps re-experiencing it in nightmare form, like Bruce Wayne remembering his own parents’ murder by a mugger) but ultimately treat it mainly as the centerpiece for a standard-issue “hero’s journey,” one that owes quite a bit to lớn the "Star Wars," "The Matrix" and "Lord of the Rings" films. When he pulls the sword from the stone, he, we & the baddies all know that he is truly The One; when he grips it with both hands and then swings, the earth trembles and the camera starts whirling in circles around và around CGI Charlie Hunnam and his adversaries, in the manner of a đoạn clip game with 3-D graphics.

This Arthur wears what looks like a brown leather bomber jacket, sports a 2016 movie star haircut, calls everybody “mate,” and makes a big show of not wanting to get involved in politics, much less embrace his destiny. That is, until circumstances require him to lớn round up a crew of hyper-competent misfit outsiders & depose the kind heist-movie style, treating every skirmish & siege as if it were another vault that the “Snatch” guys were hoping khổng lồ empty. The future Knights of the Round Table are just as contemporary. They’re a multicultural crew: this film’s Sir George is nicknamed Kung Fu George, tutors Arthur in martial arts, and is played by Hong Kong-born actor Tom Wu; Sir Bedivere is a Moor played by Beninese movie star Djimon Hounsou. Và the Anglo actors’ characters get a dusting of Dickensian chimney soot khổng lồ enhance their rough-and-ready bona fides. The future Sir William (Aiden Gillen), master of the longbow, goes by Goosefat Bill Wilson.

I love all this stuff in theory—it’s not far from what Martin Scorsese did in “The Last Temptation of Christ,” populating ancient Jerusalem with New Yorkers, Midwesterners & Brits who spoke in their native accents và used modern slang, slicing and dicing the action into music video clip beats, và scoring the whole thing with Peter Gabriel’s chants & synth beats. The Ritchie sense of style suits a revisionist approach. He’s as slick & easygoing as a rock & roller showman can be, và because the totality of the film is so knowingly absurd—in addition lớn the slow-motion, acrobatic swordfights, there are gigantic CGI snakes, rats, wolves, & Godzilla-sized Indian elephants—the whole thing feels like a lark even when the characters are being beaten, tortured & executed. There are even moments when Hunnam, not an actor exactly known for his scalawag charm, evokes Errol Flynn’s devil-may-care jerk incarnation of Robin Hood. Astrid Bergès-Frisbey’s version of Guinevere, a witch whose eyes go đen when she summons dark forces, is a fresh variation on the character, though it would’ve been nice if Ritchie had allowed her to lớn crack a few jokes like the boys. 

No, the real problem is that the movie is unmodulated from start to lớn finish. It never lets up in the exact way that a cocaine addict who wants to tell you his life story before closing time never lets up. Michael cất cánh has often been accused of turning in feature length motion pictures so over-edited that they feel like trailers for themselves, but I don’t think cất cánh has ever made a movie as frantically, pointlessly, tediously busy as “King Arthur: Legend of the Sword.” Not content to vì chưng that time-tested Guy Ritchie story-about-a-story thing in every other scene of the picture—you know, the bit where a character tells an audience, “And then I sez lớn him,” and the movie cuts lớn the same character five days earlier saying, “Put down the money, mate!”—the film does it constantly for two hours, dicing dialogue, performances & story points into microscopic narrative particles that disintegrate in the mind.

Xem thêm: Tìm bạn gái buôn ma thuột 7/2023, thuê bạn gái buôn ma thuột đắk lắk

On one level, you have khổng lồ admire the skill necessary to tell a story in this manner. You can’t just make a six-hour film and then cut it down to two. You have lớn think about how every piece, no matter how small or large, will fit with every other piece when the whole narrative is stitched together. But the downside of this strategy is that it doesn’t allow room for any single moment lớn truly live & breathe, and it’s in such moments that we really get khổng lồ know a character and care about what happens khổng lồ them. The emotional heavy lifting that might be done by acting, writing and careful direction is done here in shortcut size by whooshing, tilting, diving camerawork, ominous “whoosh” and “boom” noises on the soundtrack, và other signifiers of awesomeness. 

There’s so much narrative và visual motion, such fast cutting, such loud music, & so many rapid shifts of time và place that on those rare occasions when the movie slows down & lets two characters speak khổng lồ each other, in relative quiet & at length, it feels as if something’s gone wrong with the projection. Ritchie keeps rushing us along for two hours, as if to lớn make absolutely certain that we never have time khổng lồ absorb any character or moment, much less revel in the glorious, cheeky ridiculousness of the whole thing. The entire movie is an information delivery device with top-dollar production values, forever mistaking getting khổng lồ the point for the point itself. It’s the legend of King Arthur as told by an auctioneer. I’m not sold.

King Arthur: Legend of the Sword piles mounds of modern kích hoạt flash on an age-old tale -- & wipes out much of what made it a classic story in the first place. Read critic đánh giá


*
*
*
*
*
*
*
King Arthur: Legend of the Sword (2017)
*
King Arthur: Legend of the Sword (2017)
*
*

New on Netflix in April 2022


Upcoming TV Fantasy Series That Could Be the Next game of Thrones


How Family-Friendly Are The Glass CastleThe Nut Job 2?


View All

Critic reviews for King Arthur: Legend of the Sword


All Critics (279) | top Critics (73) | Fresh (86) | Rotten (193)
Full Review… Isaac Feldberg Inverse Full Review… Karen Han Slashfilm Full Review… Jo Livingstone The New Republic Full Review… K. Austin Collins The Ringer Full Review… David Sims The Atlantic Full Review… Simran Hans Observer (UK) Full Review… Keith Garlington Keith và the Movies Full Review… Brian Eggert Deep Focus đánh giá Full Review… Drew Dietsch FANDOM Full Review… Matt Brunson Film Frenzy Full Review… Leonie Cooper NME Full Review… Mike Massie Gone With The Twins
View All Critic reviews (279)

Audience review for King Arthur: Legend of the Sword


See All Audience reviews

Movie & TV guides

View All
Close video clip See Details
See Details

Join The Newsletter

Get the freshest reviews, news, và more delivered right khổng lồ your inbox!

Join The Newsletter Join The Newsletter

Follow Us


Join The Newsletter Join The Newsletter