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A Man for All Seasons (Special Edition)
Paul Scofield
,
Wendy Hiller
Sony Pictures, 2007
average customer review:
based on 198 reviews
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highly recommended
excellent performances
A
man
for
all
seasons
is an amazing tale of a turbulent period in english history: The king, Henry VIII, is in love with a girl and want to finish his marriage to the queen. For that He wants the Pope's consent and when He refuses, the king takes english church out of the Pope's jurisdiction and proclaims himself head of the church. So far so good. But He needs the support of the bishops, the people and the members of government. One of the most prominent members being Sir Thomas More. More is a humanist, lawyer, writer, filantropist and all around one of the most enlighted minds of the Renaissance, not to mention treasurer of the kingdom and personal friend to the king, but perhaps, more than anything: a profoundly devoted catholic.
For the king, the approval of More is fundamental for the respectable man that he is, but Sir Thomas do not agree with the king. Choosing to stay away, More remains silent in the matter, but powerful enemies want him down and push the king and his government to demmand his public approval. Knowing the law, He remains silent, believing this will save him but his mutism continues to irritate the king and his entourage, until they finally take More to trial and to his death.
A fantastic performance by Paul Scofield as the disgraced but firm More, is the key to the whole movie. His estoic speech in front of the parliament is one for the ages. The matter of a man in firm defense of his principles and convictions is as valid today as it was 300 years ago and should be an example to people of all ages. A Man fo All Seasons is truly a movie everyone should see at least once in his life.
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Do not rent this movie, OWN it.
This Academy Award winning movie is a miracle. Fred Zinne
mann's cinematic
treatment of the play by Robert Bolt has a quality of luminous economy. The casting is amazing. Every member of the cast is just right, from Paul Scofield as Sir Thomas More and Dame Wendy Hiller as Lady Alice
all
the way down to those cast as the Thames river boatmen, the messengers, the jailers at the Tower and the big lab who played the More's family dog.
The costuming and settings in the movie are perfect, a huge departure from the costuming and makeup of other historical movies produced in the fifties and sixties. Another perfectly rendered component of A Man for All
Seasons
is the soundtrack. It is sparse and beautiful and truly evokes the historical period surrounding the events that lead to the split of the English Church from Rome and the subsequent execution of Sir Thomas.
Although this movie was not made to inspire in a religious sense, it is one of the best hagiographies ever made in any medium. It is, after all, the story of a man who is now a canonized Saint of the Catholic Church. More importantly, it is a well-told story with grace abounding everywhere. The opportunities for all the characters to respond to grace seem suspended in time, the choices still waiting to be made, as if time and history have been detained so we can see what they choose to do. King Henry, the Duke of Norfolk, Richard Rich, Lady Alice, Matthew, Margaret, Cromwell ... all of them ... choosing. One of the most exquisite and heartrending scenes in the movie is the foreshadowing of the choices Henry makes -- looking up from his immediate surroundings at his wedding to Anne Boleyn and thinking he sees Thomas (whom he loves and trusts) entering the hall with a group of men. You can almost see the two-fisted thrusting away of the grace of the moment when he realizes the man is not Thomas, and that Thomas will not and cannot endorse his marriage.
Spoilers abound in the Lives of the Saints, June 22, the Feast of Sts. Thomas More and John Fisher. This movie, in my opinion, is a far better way to learn about a man who walked this earth and was remarkable in his love and compassion in imitation of Christ (and he was a lawyer!) Folks of a secular bent will not find much to complain about, either, as the movie is so well done and has no moralizing or melodrama.
A Man for All Seasons is not a movie to rent, it is a movie to own. I have already owned two VHS tapes and 2 DVDs and will probably have to buy it at least once or twice more in my life.
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SADLY, THEY DON'T MAKE THEM LIKE THIS ANYMORE
I don't mind recent Oscar winners with their complicated characters and bizarre situations (see Crash, The Departed, etc.) but it's nice to see a movie like A
MAN
FOR
ALL
SEASONS
and remmember a time when the academy rewarded movies about deep, congruent, inteligent men. A truly great one for sure.
The movie does feel a little dated regarding hair styles (very 60s!) and customs (you can easily tell they have never been worn until right before the movie was shot) but the performances and screenplay are simply fantastic. I read somewhere that Steven Spielberg hired Robert Shaw for JAWS after seeing this movie and it's easy to notice a similarity in his work on both films.
Truly terrific !
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Even more thoughtprovoking in 21st Century!
King or God? Who is more important?
Law of the land? Or religious sermon? Which is more correct?
Lawmakers or clergy - who should override whom?
Come and watch this movie to find how these thoughts were resonated in 16th Century England as it still do today at a different wavelength.
Sir Thomas More had bee glorified in last century as Saint, though he was a lawyer and a states
man
. This movie at least parti
ally explains
why. He remained firm to his stance that King Henry VIII can not be placed beyond Papal authority. As the heretic King did not like More's idea - which was not sanitizing his divorce and marriage to Anne Boleyn - the end came to Sir More too soon.
The strength of the movie is the steady and restrained and often with intelligent wit, with which Scofield carried the role. Though he utters the same for a number of times (not mentioning intentionally why), he has been able to build the man of utmost reputation and integrity, for which Sir More has been known. The research work by Bolt is commendable too.
The movie preaches a lot. If you are not a real serious movie goer, or do not want to tax your brain with real complex religious-political issues, skip it. Though that does not discredit Zinneman's work.
I would like to end this with an interesting question though. In 21st century, whom would people follow? Clergy or Head of the State. What if clergy is wrong?
What happens to Sir Mores of 21st Century then?
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Academy Award winner, for good reason
Paul Scofield gives a stellar perfor
man
ce as a man whose ethics and principles trump even his regard for his life. Mr. Scofield plays Thomas More, King Henry VIII's close friend and confidante. But when the King virtu
ally begs
Sir Thomas for his acquiescence to a divorce from Queen Katherine so that he may "legitimately" marry the coquettish Anne Boleyn, Sir Thomas, an ardent Catholic, refuses. Locked in the Tower of London and ultimately deprived even of books to read, Sir Thomas refuses to relent, ultimately paying for his principles with his life. Wendy Hiller, a brilliant stage actress is superb as Sir Thomas' wife, and it would be difficult to find a more convincing King Henry than Robert Shaw. For the collector, this movie is a must
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Adaptation of Robert Bolt's play about Sir Thomas More a Catholic states
man
in England who rebelled against Henry VIII's self-proclaimed status as the head of the Church of England and paid for his religious beliefs by having his head exhibited on London Bridge.System Requirements:Run Time: 120 minsFormat: DVD MOVIE Genre: DRAMA Rating: NR UPC: 043396180857 Manufacturer No: 18085
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