Film Review
The Private Life of Henry VIII
was an early triumph for its director-producer Alexander Korda,
the first British film to be a major hit in
the United States. The film won an Oscar for its lead actor,
Charles Laughton in the first of many iconic film portrayals, and was
also nominated for the Best Picture award. Laughton clearly relishes
the role of King Henry. In a break with the more familiar
tyrannical interpretations of this most notorious of the Tudor
monarchs, Laughton invests his character with humanity and pathos, and
delivers some superlative comedy along the way. "The things I do
for England", he sighs wearily as he trots off to fulfil his connubial
duties with an undesirable fourth wife. The ample supporting
cast includes up-and-coming stars Robert Donat and Merle Oberon,
with Elsa Lanchester shamelessly stealing the show as a wonderfully
eccentric Anne of Cleves.
A lavish production, the film exemplifies both Korda's skill as a
director as his ambition as a producer. With its
authentic-looking sets, gorgeous black-and-white cinematography and
unceasingly entertaining bravura performances, the film sets a high
benchmark for future historical films. Enjoyable it may be,
historically accurate it certainly is not. Indeed, it has almost
as little connection with historical fact as that other famous Tudor
send-up
Carry On Henry (1971).
Anne Boleyn's execution is just about the only thing that matches what
we find in the history books, not that it matters one iota. As
any screenwriter will tell you, you should never let the truth get in
the way of a good film. How much more preferable is the version
of history in which Henry divorced Anne of Cleves because she was a demon
cardsharp. After this successful collaboration, Korda and Laughton would later team up for another
impressive entry in the historical biopic line,
Rembrandt (1936),
and then an aborted adaptation of Robert Graves'
I, Claudius.
© James Travers 2010
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Film Synopsis
England, 1536. As one wife mounts the scaffold, another prepares
to take her wedding vows. King Henry VIII is confident that this
third marriage, to the beautiful but dim Jane Seymour, will be a
success. Alas, although she gives him a son and heir, she dies in
childbirth. Henry is reluctant to marry again but is persuaded to
wed Anne of Cleves, to strengthen England's bond with Germany.
This latest wife turns out to be another pedigree disaster. Not
only is she physically repugnant and still thinks babies are delivered
by storks, she also cheats at cards. Having negotiated a mutually
convenient divorce with Anne, the King turns his attention to Katherine
Howard, not knowing that she is loved by his courtier Thomas
Culpepper. At last, Henry believes he has found marital
bliss. Unfortunately, Katherine is soon for the chop when her
infidelities are exposed. Taking Anne's good advice, Henry
marries a sixth time, to the good-natured but meddlesome Catherine Parr
- who proves to be the best and the worst of the lot.
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.