An affair between a very noble knight (Franco) and the very married future Queen of England (Myles) spells doom for the young lovers. Read more
| Starring | James Franco, Sophia Myles, Rufus Sewell, David O'Hara |
|---|---|
| Director | Kevin Reynolds |
| Genres | Drama |
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An affair between a very noble knight (Franco) and the very married future Queen of England (Myles) spells doom for the young lovers.
| Starring | James Franco, Sophia Myles, Rufus Sewell, David O'Hara, Henry Cavill, Jamie King |
|---|---|
| Director | Kevin Reynolds |
| Studio | 20TH CENTURY FOX HOME ENTERTAINMENT |
| Run time | DVD: 2 hrs 5 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Drama |
| Language | English |
| Released | DVD: 11 Sep 2006 Production year: 2006 |
| Format | DVD |
Beautifully shot, excellent acting with all the right people in the leads.
Tristan (Marco) is a hero who has been taken under the wing of Rufus Sewell in the days when England was several kingdoms with everyone wanting unity under one King. Except that some are prepared to be underhand about it.
Fight scenes are missing the gore of Gladiator and Troy so are probably suitable for younger viewers.
Tristan inadvertently falls in love with the betrothed of the King, and nobly struggles to keep it under control.
The romance develops gently without explicit scenes, and leaves space between the characters that leaves you empathising.
Tension mounts because of impending battle, deception, and the developing love interest,which as you suspect throughout does end in (someones) tears. Rufus Sewell is outstanding throughout, with an understated selfcontrol and inspiring leadership.
Beautifully shot, excellent acting with all the right people in the leads.
Tristan (Marco) is a hero who has been taken under the wing of Rufus Sewell in the days when England was several kingdoms with everyone wanting unity under one King. Except that some are prepared to be underhand about it.
Fight scenes are missing the gore of Gladiator and Troy so are probably suitable for younger viewers.
Tristan inadvertently falls in love with the betrothed of the King, and nobly struggles to keep it under control.
The romance develops gently without explicit scenes, and leaves space between the characters that leaves you empathising.
Tension mounts because of impending battle, deception, and the developing love interest,which as you suspect throughout does end in (someones) tears. Rufus Sewell is outstanding throughout, with an understated selfcontrol and inspiring leadership.