5/10
"Rise Sir Lancelot, my champion!"
8 November 2007
Warning: Spoilers
I've never been a fan of the medieval knight genre, and this one manages to reinforce my feelings. I just couldn't tell what they were going for in the story, and abrupt scene changes often occurred on a dime with no time at all allotted for the transition. Like early in the picture with news of King Leodogran's challenge to Arthur for each of their champions to meet in duel to decide Arthur's status as King. No sooner said than done, Sir Lancelot (Cornel Wilde) is atop a horse and going hell bent for leather against Sir Dorjak.

Others on this board have mentioned the ages of the principals, something I wondered about myself. It was a little hard to fathom Lady Guinevere (Jean Wallace) looking her true age representing a King's daughter about to be betrothed. Kind of makes you glad they had that magic soap around.

The one thing the film had going for it was the realistic battle scenes, with body blows taking on a gruesome countenance. The scene where Lancelot separates a warrior's shoulder was particularly graphic. At the same time though, my earlier comment applies as well to the final epic battle. At one point we see Lancelot right in the thick of things swinging away with his sword, and a minute later he's perusing the battle field from a distant vantage point as different sets of warriors enter the fray; it almost looked like there were more than two fronts to the battle.

And say, what accent was Cornel Wilde going for? His character was French, but he sounded more like Russian to me. That is, when he wasn't sounding like something else altogether. I don't know, the picture just didn't do it for me, and with all that went before to test the mettle of the besieged lovers, Guinevere becomes a nun? Her speech might have been noble but not very convincing. Alas poor Lancelot, as capable as he was on the battlefield, this was one blow he never saw coming.
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