All the King's Men

1999

Drama / Mystery / War

4
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 68% · 2 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 68% · 100 ratings
IMDb Rating 7.1/10 10 1121 1.1K

Please enable your VPΝ when downloading torrents

If you torrent without a VPΝ, your ISP can see that you're torrenting and may throttle your connection and get fined by legal action!

Get Expert VPΝ

Plot summary

Feature-length drama about the mystery of Sandringham Company, which disappeared in action at Gallipoli in 1915. Commanded by Captain Frank Beck, their estate manager, the men advanced into battle, were enveloped in a strange mist and never seen again.

Director

Top cast

Maggie Smith as Queen Alexandra
Tom Burke as Private Chad Batterbee
Phyllis Logan as Mary Beck
Emma Cunniffe as Peggy Batterbee
720p.WEB
998.48 MB
1280*722
English 2.0
NR
25 fps
1 hr 48 min
Seeds 100+

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by CinemaSerf 6 / 10

All the King's Men

As the grandchildren of Queen Victoria all squared up against each other at the start of the Great War, and as the once powerful Ottoman Empire finally shut up shop, the staff at King George V's Norfolk Residence at Sandringham formed their own regiment determined to train and do their part for the war effort. They are led by the fastidious estate manager "Beck" (David Jason) and with the blessing of their royal patron, Queen Alexandra (a rather unremarkable performance from Dame Maggie Smith) set off to the Turkish sphere of operations where incomplete history tells us they were in involved in the perilous and somewhat disastrous Gallipoli campaign. This story is told from a perspective of a search, instigated by the Queen, into just what did happen and there is a familiar collection of faces used to deliver a story of courage and of, frankly, enthusiastic ineptitude at just about every level. David Jason is what we in Britain call a "National Treasure" but mainly as a comedy actor. Here, he seemed rather miscast and for me he failed to really ignite this formidable character as he becomes more of a parody of the stiff upper lip mentality than an exponent of it. It was made by the BBC and though they have clearly thrown considerable resource at this, it still looks and feels like a television movie with little by way of grand-scale illustrative photography of the battle scenes or the scale of the operations, and it's grasp of the horrors of war is just a little too tepid to deliver poignantly enough. That said, it's still a good looking drama that tells an interesting story that could also probably be applied to so many towns and villages across the land who cobbled together their own troops of the ill-prepared, the frightened and the patriotic to go and fight a war about which they knew virtually nothing for officers who had quite possibly all but inherited their commands, and who didn't know a great deal more.
Reviewed by mark.waltz 6 / 10

Giving World War I a look at through the British involvement.

Reviewed by olihist 8 / 10

Powerful Depiction of Gallipoli, if Tainted by a Controversial Ending

World War 1 (or "The Great War") is never an easy subject to cover on film without leaning towards the extremes of patriotism or cynicism. "All the Kings Men" somehow manages to balance between the two ends, depicting the fighting at Gallipoli in the realistic terms that it deserves. This slips at the ending, however, into a controversial depiction of the fate of the battalion that drew criticism not only from the Turkish ambassador to London but one of Captain Beck's grandsons.Despite this shortcoming, "All the Kings Men" is still a powerful - and humane - depiction of the awful tragedy that was Gallipoli, from the British side.Aloha ????8/10.
Read more IMDb reviews

No comments yet

Be the first to leave a comment