A bit of a curate's egg, this one
Some wonderful acting from an especially well selected cast, who had all obviously studied their respective characters carefully, as was evidenced by some particularly effective body language and posture, and, in some cases even looked rather uncannily like their personas-particularly worthy of mention were the wonderful late Tim Pigott-Smith (who will be sadly missed), in the eponymous lead, and, in a much lesser role, Margot Leicester as Camilla. I felt Charlotte Riley (Kate) was rather over-egging the pudding at times, presumably to illustrate her overarching ambition, but Richard Goulding, as Harry, was simply wonderful, and eerily familiar
I shall gloss over the plot, as it's difficult to criticize without giving too much away, but, although somewhat 'dumbed-down', as is today's fashion, it was probably the most cerebrally challenging new drama I've seen in quite some time-lots of food for thought, and 'what if's?'
Well filmed, although this wasn't really too difficult, as most of the shots were interior, and beautifully dressed, this was a good return to form for the beleaguered BBC, which begs the question-why bury it in the midweek schedule, on BBC2?..
I do have some criticisms, however-my perennial complaint about diction and vocabulary (with the exception of TP-S), a few foolish throw-away lines (the Duchess of Cornwall telling the Duchess of Cambridge that 'we don't have a constitution'-well, actually, we do, it's just not a written constitution), and some procedural errors: although Charles would be referred to 'His Majesty' by courtesy immediately upon the death of his mother, his son would need to be invested as the Prince of Wales, and would not, therefore, refer to himself as such until then, nor would he be addressed as 'His Royal Highness' until after his father had been crowned (you can see why they were simply credited as 'Charles' and 'William')-I thought the inclusion of a ghost was juvenile and preposterous-a silly device to allow the author (Mike Bartlett) to hammer home the characters' thoughts- but these are mere semantics
On the whole, it was a well thought-out and well written piece-perhaps a little clumsy and obvious in places, but most enjoyable nonetheless
If you missed it, I should recommend catching-up as soon as possible-don't be put off by the fact that it's written in blank verse-Shakespeare it ain't, believe me, and the rather peculiar mix of flowery prose and C21 slang is initially rather grating on the ear, but as the play progresses, you soon learn to ignore it. Enjoy it as it is, if only as this was T P-S's last performance
Oh, and I thought Tamara Lawrance was simply delicious
King Charles III
2017
Action / Drama / Sci-Fi
King Charles III
2017
Action / Drama / Sci-Fi
Plot summary
Prince Charles' accession to the throne following the Queen's death. When he refuses to sign a controversial bill into law, political chaos ensues: a constitutional crisis, rioting on the streets and a tank in front of Buckingham Palace.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
July 13, 2021 at 03:38 PM
Director
Top cast
Tech specs
720p.WEB 1080p.WEBMovie Reviews
Finally-a return to form for the BBC
A thought provoking story...
Its astonishing the kind of battering this movie has taken from some critics. I watched it last night after the Royal Wedding (Harry & Meghan). I needed an antidote to a ceremony that had all the trappings of history and state yet seemed in other ways strangely...'other'.
This movie certainly provided the antidote. I enjoyed it for its controversial view of a post Elizabeth II monarchical scenario. I think it scored well in several areas. It underlined the uncertainty arising after 70+ years of Elizabethan rule. That's 3 generations. Assuming Philip would have passed on before the Queen. Charles is shown as 'confused'. Quite probable. However much he prepares himself, the event when it happens will change everything...
There is this question in many minds as to whether Charles will accept the kingship or pass it on to William asap. Then how will the political establishment react to the inevitable passing, esp. in view of a possibly stalling Brexit (not mentioned in the movie but there nonetheless). The relationship between Charles and the political establishment, and his sons, is esp. worth watching...
Tim Piggott-Smith does a very good job as Charles. I think William was also well drawn by the actor playing him. The interplay between William and Kate was fascinating. Is she really so driven? I was less impressed by the way Harry was drawn. Not the actor's fault...The script drew him as weak, muddled, somewhat rebellious and a bit 'out of it'. The Harry we know is gregarious, engaging, very active and dynamic, very much his own man and doing his own thing. But he is also very angry about everything re his late mother and how the Palace treated her. This hardly comes through at all. However, I agree with how the story portrays his relationship to the monarchy v the outside world.
I watched this film online. I'll buy the DVD. Its worth it. It serves to remind people esp. in the UK, that there are ahead no more Royal weddings...only Royal funerals, for Philip then the Queen, within the next 5 yrs? This movie does us a service by helping to prepare people in the UK esp. and worldwide for that experience. When it happens, the world will change. However much anti-monarchists reject this, the British Monarchy is a Force, recognised and celebrated word-wide for 70+ years. When this happens, everything will change, somehow.
I thank the producers for making this movie when they did. There are no spoilers in this review as far as I'm aware.
MODERN DAY MACBETH. MUCH BETTER THAN MOST PEOPLE WOULD HAVE IT HERE
Well, what can I do here apart from expressing my belief that an awful lot of reviewers appear to have missed the point somewhat.
I think that the current Prince Charles is a very fine and honest human being who will do a great job as monarch when HM the Q finally leaves this world. I hope that doesn't happen any time soon but, at her current age of 94, one has to suppose that her days might be numbered.
I liked this telemovie very, very much. I thought that Tim Pigott-Smith and Margot Leicester were especially good and very convincing as Charles and Camilla.
What, I wonder, is so hard for many reviewers to accept that a man of clear principle and good conscience such as Charles might refuse Royal Assent to a Bill that sought to limit the freedom of the press and, evidently, to make it a criminal offence for reporters to do what reporters do now without fear of being thrown into gaol.
Frankly, although refusal of Royal Assent does not evidently happen in practice, I would hope that a British monarch would refuse Assent to a Bill such as that briefly described here in this movie.
I also have great difficulty in accepting that such a Bill would in fact pass both houses of Parliament in the UK anyway. Freedom of the press is something that every thinking person should support despite some in the media's preparedness to abuse it. Freedom of the press is, after all, what separates civilized Government from left or right wing dictatorship.
I liked the use of Shakespearean style dialogue here and it is clear to me that "King Charles III" is in fact something of an update to Shakespeare's Macbeth.
Clearly, Kate is the nasty piece of work in Lady Macbeth, Charles is King Duncan and William is Macbeth himself, a bit soft but motivated to dreadful acts by his wife.
All in all, I really rated this movie and I will watch it often. When he becomes King, I think the current Prince Charles may very well be the first British monarch to refuse Royal Assent, assuming that that has never before happened.