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La vie privée d'Henry VIII

Original title: The Private Life of Henry VIII
  • 1933
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 37m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
5.2K
YOUR RATING
Charles Laughton in La vie privée d'Henry VIII (1933)
In honor of Asian Pacific American Heritage Month, we're celebrating a trio of actors who fearlessly blazed trails in Old Hollywood. On this IMDbrief, we present just a few of the Unsung Asian American Pacific Islander Heroes of Film History.
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King Henry VIII marries five more times after his divorce from his first wife Catherine of Aragon.King Henry VIII marries five more times after his divorce from his first wife Catherine of Aragon.King Henry VIII marries five more times after his divorce from his first wife Catherine of Aragon.

  • Director
    • Alexander Korda
  • Writers
    • Lajos Biró
    • Arthur Wimperis
  • Stars
    • Charles Laughton
    • Robert Donat
    • Franklin Dyall
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    5.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Alexander Korda
    • Writers
      • Lajos Biró
      • Arthur Wimperis
    • Stars
      • Charles Laughton
      • Robert Donat
      • Franklin Dyall
    • 63User reviews
    • 39Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 Oscar
      • 4 wins & 1 nomination total

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    Photos75

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    Top cast27

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    Charles Laughton
    Charles Laughton
    • Henry VIII
    Robert Donat
    Robert Donat
    • Thomas Culpeper
    Franklin Dyall
    Franklin Dyall
    • Thomas Cromwell
    Miles Mander
    Miles Mander
    • Wriothesley
    Lawrence Hanray
    Lawrence Hanray
    • Archbishop Cranmer
    William Austin
    William Austin
    • Duke of Cleves
    John Loder
    John Loder
    • Peynell
    Claud Allister
    Claud Allister
    • Cornell
    • (as Claude Allister)
    Gibb McLaughlin
    Gibb McLaughlin
    • The French Executioner
    • (as Gibb Mc.Laughlin)
    Sam Livesey
    Sam Livesey
    • The English Executioner
    Merle Oberon
    Merle Oberon
    • Anne Boleyn - The Second Wife
    Wendy Barrie
    Wendy Barrie
    • Jane Seymour - The Third Wife
    Elsa Lanchester
    Elsa Lanchester
    • Anne of Cleves - The Fourth Wife
    Binnie Barnes
    Binnie Barnes
    • Katherine Howard - The Fifth Wife
    Everley Gregg
    Everley Gregg
    • Katherine Parr - The Sixth Wife
    Lady Tree
    Lady Tree
    • The King's Nurse
    Frederick Culley
    • Duke of Norfolk
    • (uncredited)
    Mark Daly
    Mark Daly
    • Spectator at Anne Boleyn's Execution
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Alexander Korda
    • Writers
      • Lajos Biró
      • Arthur Wimperis
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews63

    7.05.1K
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    Featured reviews

    7Doylenf

    Laughton richly deserved his Oscar as Henry VIII...

    Highly enjoyable British film from Alexander Korda, THE PRIVATE LIFE OF HENRY VIII gives CHARLES LAUGHTON the plum role of his career and he munches on all the scenery with artistic skill and great humor. Even though he has the spotlight, others around him make the film a highly enjoyable one to watch.

    ROBERT DONAT is handsome and sensitive as Culpepper, a favorite of the Court who has the misfortune to love one of Henry's wives (BINNIE BARNES).

    MERLE OBERON has a brief role as Ann Boleyn in a sensitive scene where she worries about meeting the executioner's ax. Oberon would later marry Korda and this was a showy but brief role that gave her career a good start.

    ELSA LANCHESTER provides a lot of chuckles as Anne of Cleves, the woman whose portrait fascinates Henry--until he meets her. Her facial displays are deliberately meant to provoke him--that and her ungainly movements--and she and Laughton play their scenes together with great finesse.

    TCM is showing a good print of the film which makes it all the more enjoyable, because the sets and costumes are quite opulent and photographed skillfully. The pace is brisk, the humor is ever present, the story never loses interest and Laughton--even at his hammiest--is superb as the king who tried to find happiness but found out that it eluded him at every turn.
    Film Dog

    Charles Laughton IS Henry VIII.

    Charles Laughton is quite simply one of the best actors to ever grace the earth. EVER. He proves his range once again as he portrays Henry VIII. Now, I've never seen Henry VIII, but I swore I was looking at him. To me, Laughton is that convincing. Compare this confident, powerful character to his 'Ruggles', in "Ruggles of Red Gap". A total wimp. A complete 180. Then there's Capt. Bligh. From sissy to nasty. The freaks: Quasimodo, Dr. Moreau, Nero, et.al. To say this man can play any sort of role is putting it mildly. Name one other actor with more range. I personally can't.
    6AlsExGal

    I doubt Henry would recognize his own private life

    The reasons to watch this are A. Laughton's marvelous performance. He captures the bombast and lust for life of King Henry, and he also captures Henry raging against the dying of the light - his own aging - in a very poignant way. And he certainly looks like him. Then there is B. The fabulous cast, often before they are famous in America, such as Merle Oberon and Robert Donat, who wins the Best Actor award six years later as Mr. Chips.

    As for the facts? I never expect dead on accuracy in historical dramas, BUT this one completely misses the mark. Catherine of Aragon, married to Henry for 18 years and the inability of Henry to obtain a divorce from her causing the founding of the Church of England, and she is given just a title card at the beginning, described as being "of no importance". The film picks up at the execution of Anne Boleyn (Oberon), Henry's second wife. Anne of Cleves, Henry's fourth wife with whom he probably never consummated his marriage because he found her ugly and ungraceful, is supposedly the centerpiece of his life! Now I realize this was done because she is played by Elsa Lanchester, and she and Laughton were married - and the two have marvelous chemistry and comic timing - but the film so misrepresents their relationship it is mind boggling.

    And Katherine Howard, wife number five, was a 17 year old girl when Henry married her, not a grown woman sitting around for years waiting for Henry to dispose of wives until he got around to her.

    What really puzzles me is that this film was made in Britain, so I'm surprised they played so fast and loose with the facts. It would be like making a film in America about George Washington in which Marie Antoinette was the great love of his life, and that her beheading brought on his decline and death. But then history is so poorly taught in this country perhaps the public would buy it.
    8A-No.1

    Don't forget Elsa Lanchester

    All the comments I have read about this movie have focussed on Charles Laughton and though he gives a performance that makes this film worth seeing on that basis alone, I was more struck by Elsa Lanchester and daresay that she even managed to usurp him in their scenes together. Her performance as Anne of Cleves is one that is memorably eccentric, as she plays her with a kind of flakey caginess that is funny, fascinating and original. She is also quite striking to watch and I am thankful that Bride of Frankenstein has given her a degree of cinematic immortality that might otherwise have been denied her. Returning to this film though, it is highly entertaining, though its abrupt mood shifts leave the viewer with an inconsistent impression about Henry VIII and his volatile personality, but, then again, perhaps that was the point: to show just how inconsistent a man he was in his thoughts and desires.
    7didi-5

    Charles Laughton as the Tudor king

    Alexander Korda's film about Henry VIII was a worthy Oscar winner - the first time a British film was so recognised. Seen now it is a dated piece of work but Charles Laughton has the heart and soul of the king down to perfection - grumbling, belching, ripping meat of the bones with his bare hands, leering at the women of his court, and - when the situation allows it - giving the part a fair amount of pathos.

    Oddly, the film begins with the execution of Anne Boleyn (Merle Oberon). We don't see the first wife, Katherine of Aragon, at all. Wendy Barrie is Jane Seymour, the one true love of Henry's life - for her he changed his initialled monogram from an entwined H and A (for Anne) to H and J. Catherine Howard is played by Binnie Barnes - she's a bit too flighty for my liking and not an accurate reading of Catherine as history renders her. Robert Donat has a thankless part as Culpeper, who Catherine sets her sights on. And as Catherine Parr, the last Queen to Henry and the one to outlast him, Everley Gregg is amusing and touching.

    The scene-stealer as usual though is the real-life Mrs Laughton, Elsa Lanchester, playing the plain, card-dealing, Anne of Cleves. She puts this part across with little effort, wheedling money from her new husband in lieu of the expected fruits of their wedding night. These scenes are a great source of comedy as the two pros play off each other.

    'The Private Life of Henry VIII' is a good play, and just when you think you know how the part is going to go, it surprises you as all good acting should. Laughton would do other good work for Korda (including Rembrandt a few years later) but this is one of his best remembered roles for British cinema.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      According to Binnie Barnes, Charles Laughton was a method actor, and when Wendy Barrie giggled during a scene to the actor's aggravation, he bit her on the arm, breaking her skin, exactly as the real Henry often did when angry with his wives.
    • Goofs
      Anne of Cleves compares Henry to the legend of Bluebeard, a literary work not known to exist before 1697.
    • Quotes

      [Henry's fourth wedding night]

      King Henry VIII: My wife? Huh... not yet.

      Anne of Cleves: Poor mother told me... first he says the marriage is no good, and then he cuts off the head with an ax chopper!

      King Henry VIII: That is an exaggeration, madam.

      Anne of Cleves: Then why do you say I am not yet your wife?

      King Henry VIII: Well, madam, uh, a marriage ceremony doesn't make us one.

      Anne of Cleves: Mmm?

      [shows her ring]

      King Henry VIII: Oh, yes, yes, yes, 's all right, but you, uh, have to, umm, I have to...

      Anne of Cleves: What?

      King Henry VIII: Did your mother not talk to you about...

      Anne of Cleves: What?

      King Henry VIII: Oh Lord. Ohhhh, well, uh, madam, all that stuff about children being found under gooseberry bushes... that's not true...

    • Crazy credits
      Opening credits prologue: Henry VIII had six wives. Catherine of Aragon was the first; but her story is of no particular interest - she was a respectable woman-so Henry divorced her. He then married Anne Boleyn. This marriage also was a failure-but not for the same reason.
    • Connections
      Featured in The 40th Annual Academy Awards (1968)

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    FAQ16

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 29, 1933 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Languages
      • English
      • German
    • Also known as
      • La vida privada de Enrique VIII
    • Filming locations
      • Hampton Court Palace, East Molesey, Surrey, England, UK(Exterior shots)
    • Production company
      • London Film Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • £60,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 37 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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