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The Tragedy of Richard III

  • Téléfilm
  • 1983
  • Not Rated
  • 3h 59min
NOTE IMDb
8,2/10
255
MA NOTE
Ron Cook in The Tragedy of Richard III (1983)
Drame

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueRichard of Gloucester uses murder and manipulation to claim England's throne.Richard of Gloucester uses murder and manipulation to claim England's throne.Richard of Gloucester uses murder and manipulation to claim England's throne.

  • Réalisation
    • Jane Howell
  • Scénario
    • William Shakespeare
  • Casting principal
    • Peter Benson
    • Antony Brown
    • David Burke
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    8,2/10
    255
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Jane Howell
    • Scénario
      • William Shakespeare
    • Casting principal
      • Peter Benson
      • Antony Brown
      • David Burke
    • 12avis d'utilisateurs
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Photos4

    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche

    Rôles principaux54

    Modifier
    Peter Benson
    Peter Benson
    • King Henry VI
    Antony Brown
    Antony Brown
    • Sir Richard Ratcliffe
    • (as Anthony Brown)
    David Burke
    David Burke
    • Sir William Catesby
    Michael Byrne
    Michael Byrne
    • Duke of Buckingham
    Anne Carroll
    • Jane Shore
    Paul Chapman
    Paul Chapman
    • Earl Rivers
    Ron Cook
    Ron Cook
    • Richard III
    Rowena Cooper
    • Queen Elizabeth
    Arthur Cox
    Arthur Cox
    • Lord Grey…
    Annette Crosbie
    Annette Crosbie
    • Duchess of York
    David Daker
    David Daker
    • Lord Hastings
    Brian Deacon
    Brian Deacon
    • Henry, Earl of Richmond…
    Jeremy Dimmick
    • Young Duke of York
    Tenniel Evans
    Tenniel Evans
    • Lord Stanley
    Derek Farr
    Derek Farr
    • Sir Robert Brakenbury…
    Dorian Ford
    • Edward, Prince of Wales
    Julia Foster
    Julia Foster
    • Queen Margaret
    Derek Fuke
    • Second Murderer…
    • Réalisation
      • Jane Howell
    • Scénario
      • William Shakespeare
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs12

    8,2255
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    Avis à la une

    beeryusa

    Great adaptation - why isn't it available on DVD???

    Again, we see another example of a great 'lost' film. This is without a doubt the best Richard III on film (or in this case on videotape). Why, oh why, are so many such great films like this consigned to a film vault somewhere, gathering dust, when they could be making their owners lots of cash??? It's incredible to me that great works of cinematic and TV art are in danger of being permanently lost to us, while lesser works are on videotape and DVD in various versions including letterboxed, full screen, special edition, etc.

    This teleplay is among the best British TV dramas ever produced. Won't someone please get great British TV dramas like this released on DVD???
    10thirdsqurl

    The best Richard III on film

    As a fan of Richard III, I've seen every version produced. I still do not understand why anyone likes Laurence Olivier's version with its grim, heavy-handed performance. Ron Cook is the perfect Richard, upbeat and energetic, sly and humorous, delighting in his mission until the weight of his crimes begin to trouble his conscience. Jane Powell's direction, as she did with Henry VI parts I, II and III (my favorite of the series), keeps the action moving and the characters in sharp focus, especially King Edward, whose final speech is one you'll always remember. This is the Richard that Shakespeare wanted his audience to see, a man of a courage who loses control of his ambition.
    10MarkB-11

    Trenchant begins to describe this version...

    I'm fairly sure that many educated and interested-in-film folk have seen the superb and terrifying McKellen version, but sadly, I'd bet hardly anyone remembers this version, which in the original was the capstone of the cycle of plays that begins with Richard II and continues through the various Henry plays (six of 'em). The series was cast as a whole, and the list of actors is a who's-who of British acting skill, culminating in this horrorshow of a play. From the opening moments, when the camera pulls back from the last frame of Henry VI, Part III to reveal a small blackboard, onto which a disembodied hand scrawls Richard III in chalk, to the final frame, where Margaret sits, cackling hysterically atop a pile of bodies (all the characters killed in the preceding eight plays), this version assaults you and tests your ability to withstand true, and intentional villainy, as personified in the demonic Richard. See this version...plague the BBC with letters asking for it to be reissued...write to the actors and shower them with adulation..whatever it takes to return this play to the public eye, where it richardly belongs. Cheers!
    10Dr_Coulardeau

    Encrypted propaganda

    It is one of the best known and most produced play by Shakespeare and certainly the best known and most produced history. What's surprising about this play is that it can stand all by itself though knowing the three Henry the Sixth plays help understand the stake of this one. True enough it only helps because this history is very self sufficient, in a way.

    We have to clear the plate of a question that is today no longer debated. Shakespeare proposes here the vision of Richard III promoted by the Tudors, that is to say those who vanquished and destroyed him, in order to stabilize and justify their taking over te throne of England. Richard III was not the physical monster they described.

    This being said this play is a real thriller. Richard has to eliminate everyone on his path to climb (really climb) to the throne. I would say that sounds plain normal but he declares himself to be evil and to enjoy killing, particularly innocent people. And when he has finally finished the elimination of those who have a blood claim to the throne, except Richmond who has fled to Brittany, he starts killing those who have helped him in his ascent, which is politically absurd and plain suicidal. Henry Tudor, Earl of Richmond, comes back with an army and defeats Richard III at Bosworth in 1485 and thus becomes Henry VII known as the first Tudor king, though he is a Lancaster, which means the House of Lancaster in the end wins but they change the dynastic reference, probably to ensure the past be the past, which might explain why Richard III after proper examination was buried in a small church with no indication on his grave, which explains why in modern times when the church was pull down to open some space for a parking lot no archaeological search was started and Richard III remained under the parking lot for a long time before new excavations to build some new structure finally discovered him, or at least his remains.

    The victor is always right and history hates the past and disguises it to the colors of the present, which means the color of the past changes from one present to the next [...]

    This production is superb in many ways, once again by the physical acting of pain, sorrow and death, particularly with body language, facial language and tonal language. A triplet of queens is essential: Margaret the old widow of Henry the Sixth; Lady Anne, widow to Edward Prince of Wales, son of Henry the Sixth, later married to the Duke of Gloster who later became Richard the Third; and Elizabeth, queen to Edward the Fourth and then his widow. Of these three queens Lady Anne is the most discreet though fundamental because of her marrying Gloster, the future Richard the Third and the killer of both her husband and her father in law, but another triplet is composed with the Duchess of York, mother to King Edward the Fourth, Clarence and Gloster, the latter to become Richard the Third. The oldest of them, Margaret is a real warmonger against Richard the Third and this production makes her triumphant at the very end, after the concluding words from Henry the Seventh, sitting, laughing hysterically, at the top of a pile of half denuded dead bodies, and holding the corpse of Richard the Third. The full and final step of this purification cycle typical of Shakespeare: she takes, or rather is granted, the victory she is provided with by history or fate [...]

    But to show how strong Shakespeare's music can be, I will make a final remark on the famous ghost scene. In his last night living on earth before the battle of Bosworth he has a dream that brings up EIGHT apparitions of ghosts, eleven ghosts all together [...]

    EIGHT is the symbol of the Second Coming, and here we have eleven second comings. The Second Coming is the triggering event of the Apocalypse in the Book of Revelation.

    ELEVEN is the number of apostles after the elimination of Judas, the eleven apostles who retire away from the Crucifixion (except John) and who deny Jesus, like Peter, and who hide away from the crucifixion and post crucifixion scene out of fear. These eleven apostles announce the resurrection too, even if in a negative way, the way they announce the end of Richard III but they also appear to Richmond and they announce the resurrection of the English monarchy with Henry the Seventh, known as Richmond in this play.

    Finally NINE is necessary to complete the prophecy, the prediction, by identifying the beast, in this case Richard the Third. And sure enough the ghosts are going to curse Richard III with a simple formula: "despair and die." And in that ghost scene this mantra is repeated NINE times.

    We must understand that in Elizabethan times, after the Reformation and in the ascending phase of chapels and Puritanism, such biblical references (in this case the Passion of Jesus and the Book of Revelation) were unavoidable elements that everyone understood and appreciated. What's more it is very effective in the "propaganda" (rather self-justification) of the Tudors: the killing of the crucifixion is prophesied, the Second Coming is announced and the Beast is identified. We are in the midst of medieval numerical symbolism. This makes me say NINE is the numerical symbol of this king, and as I have already said in my review of Henry the Sixth, Part Three: 1 + 8 = 9; 4 + 5 = 9; 1 + 4 + 8 + 5 = 18 = 9 x 2. The beast is killed on the diabolical date that is also the resurrection date of Bosworth, the final battle. After this last battle the prophecy of the New Messianic Jerusalem becomes possible [...]

    Dr Jacques COULARDEAU
    10TheLittleSongbird

    The rise and fall of Richard III

    Not easy to follow on from the three part 'Henry VI', two parts of which in my view solid but not great and the third part being very good. And it is hard not to expect a lot, when Richard III is one of Shakespeare's most fascinating characters, and not just as a "villain", and he was also interesting as a historical figure. 'Richard III' may not be among my favourite Shakespeare plays, but it is so easy to seee why it is performed as much as it is and why it is so widely discussed.

    'Richard III' is one of the longest in length of the uneven but very interesting (and on the whole a must watch) BBC Television Shakespeare series, excepting the ones that by tradition were in one than one part. So 'Henry IV' and 'Henry VI'. To me, and quite a few others it seems, it is one of the series' best and one of the best and also more faithful and complete versions of 'Richard III'. Worthy of more attention and should be pretty much the version to be shown in schools, if studying the play.

    Sure it is not the most visually sumptuous of productions, the productions in the BBC Television Shakespeare were made on a low budget and that was evident in some productions, but most overcame that and still didn't manage to look too bad in the process. 'Richard III' is one of the better examples of that. It still manages to look well designed and atmospheric as well being in good tastes, no questionable touches here. The camera work is very good with enough intimacy, with no gimmicks, chaos or restriction. Didn't feel to me like it was too much of a filmed play.

    To me, the staging was compelling and didn't get overly-busy or dull, neither did it feel emotionally cold. There was plenty of movement and there is a lot going on in the quite complex plot, without feeling rushed or over-complicated. The climactic battle of Bosworth field scene was especially well done, the touch at the very end was interesting to say the least and not one to forget in a hurry.

    Cannot fault the cast. Ron Cook is as excellent as he was before in the 'Henry VI' three parter, but now with Richard even more interesting and with a much bigger role (from a sizeable supporting role to one of Shakespeare's most fascinating and most talked about lead characters) he is even better. Really liked his understated subtlety, which did stop him from doing into stock villain territory (Richard isn't that really), but he is also suitably malevolent. He does well with the challenges of the physical side of the role, speaking as a scoliosis sufferer myself before my pretty traumatic major spinal surgery. Have spoken a lot about him, slightly unintentional but somewhat appropriate considering the role.

    But one mustn't overlook the rest of the cast, and it is the acting that other than Shakespeare's timeless writing that is one of the production's biggest strengths. Standouts being Rowena Cooper's dignified Elizabeth and especially Julia Foster's ruthless Margaret (more interesting and much more juicily written role than in the 'Henry VI' three parter, and by now Foster, who didn't do it for me at first in 'Henry VI' has really grown into the role and made it her own. Brian Protheroe doesn't overdo the bluster thankfully and Paul Jesson is an interesting Clarence. Interesting to see Zoe Wanamaker and Annette Crosbie. Those doing more than one character, intriguing and brave choice, do a great job making each character different from each other which helps not confuse the drama.

    In conclusion, wonderful production and the 'Richard III' to learn from if studying it. 10/10

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    Centres d’intérêt connexes

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    Le saviez-vous

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    • Anecdotes
      This episode was filmed on the same set as the three Henry VI plays. However, designer Oliver Bayldon altered the set so it would appear to be a ruin, as England reached its lowest point of chaos. In the same vein, the costumes became more and more monotone as the four plays went on; The First Part of Henry the Sixth (1983) features brightly coloured costumes which clearly distinguish the various combatants from one another, but by this point, everyone fights in similarly coloured dark costumes, with little to differentiate one army from another.
    • Gaffes
      When Henry VI's corpse is borne in on a brier, the Queen laments the passing of her husband. When she removes the sheets, Henry VI's stomach can clearly be seen heaving.
    • Connexions
      Featured in The Story of English: A Muse Of Fire (1986)

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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 23 janvier 1983 (Royaume-Uni)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Royaume-Uni
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Richard III
    • Sociétés de production
      • British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)
      • Time-Life Television Productions
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 3h 59min(239 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.33 : 1

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