@@joncooke9515 Indeed, Disney will cast Lizzo as Arthur and Timothee Chalamet as Guenievere, Lancelot to be likely played by a blind, wheelchair driving dual-amputee trans from Sri Lanka.
Have a DVD of this, saw it when it first came out. Only 2004’s King Arthur is comparable. The music at the end was composed by Richard Wagner, whose music is used in many movies.
@@garcia207Disney would never remake this. Everyone is white and there are only two women. One cheats on her husband with his best friend and the other screws her brother.
One of the greatest scenes ever filmed. The men, the music, the moment, the 'Lady in the Lake'. Emotional and powerful, it stands the test of time just like the legend......
@@evertonporter7887 "definite finality" No, my friend, and I just realized it for the first time. Percival casts Excalibur to the Lady of the Lake, and she takes it away for safe-keeping, to Wagner's theme for Seigfried's funeral. It is not lost, Arthur had explained, "One day...the Sword will rise again." But when Percival returns to Arthur to make his report, Arthur himself is lost--until Percival sees him being taken away across the Lake to the same theme. Because Arthur's full quote is "One day a King will come, and the Sword will rise again," I believe Boorman's intent here is to indicate that Arthur himself will be that retuning King, as foreshadowed by Guinevere's keeping of the Sword for him against his return from the Wilderness. I am constantly amazed at the profound insights this story reveals.
@@Siegfried5846 you're alone with your "opinion". This scene is a masterpiece. And Wagner's music fits perfectly. You wouldn't complain about "Ride of the valkyries" being used in the iconic "Apocalypse now" scene, would you? And keep in mind this is a 42y movie-scene uploaded in shitty quality to youtube. It doesn't do it justice even the slightest...
@@uwebiernacki Yes, I would complain about that. Wagner deserves better than to be associated with mass murder by deranged, leftist communists in "Apocalypse Now", or with violent, distasteful, doomsday prophesies by deranged, rightist theocrats in "Excalibur".
The frame where the Lady of the Lake holds Excalibur for a moment before taking it into the water is a masterpiece of three-point composition. The sword and her arm are off-center in the frame (and perfectly, elegantly straight), the setting sun to the right above (is it setting or is it rising? ), the lake completing the foreground...it's cinematic beauty the likes of which we seldom see anymore. And the smooth, sudden motion with which the arm and sword slip under the water with barely a ripple, all timed to Wagner's beautiful score! Like many of you, I also saw this in 1981. I was 13, I had just read Lord of the Rings for the first time that year, I was enraptured by the realm of fantasy, and then I saw this!
Concider yourself lucky, that even at the young age of 13, you began this trip with a film for adults, instead of a children-film/subject, like LOTR. I watched it around 1986, being 7, and that spared me watching LOTR, cause I then was 22, and an adult... ;-)
Spare a thought for Perceval. The humblest knight; a peasant. The most loyal, true and chivalric of them all. He did not fall as Lancelot did. The only one to come back from the grail quest. The only one to bear witness to Arthur’s passing to Avalon. The only one to watch as magic fades from the world. The only one who will bring Arthur’s legend to the world. The loneliness incomparable he must feel.
Let’s not forget he stood in for Lancelot for the Queen when he was just a Squire. Perceval is an amazing character, sad to he saw the end of all but then again all things must come to an end.
The climax as Percival throws the sword sailing end over end against the dark forestry background, music at its richest, and the Lady of the Lake catches it.... Holds it high momentarily, then takes it under is simply incredible. Chills every time.
MAJESTIC. Still, one of the most moving moments in in cinema history... All of it. The acting, scenes, music.. Will we ever see the likes of this version of Arthur again. God bless the late Nigel Terry.
"This version" doesn't exist outside of this film. Two large changes in this scene alone: Arthur spears Mordred who runs up the spear and slashes Arthur on the head with his sword and the last surviving knight is Bedivere not Percival.
""This version" doesn't exist outside of this film." They didn't even have knight's armor for 800 years or more later after Arthur's time. Also there were elements from other stories - Athur placing his sword between Lancelot and Guinevere was from Tristan and Isolt. These are tímeless myths - the theme of transitioning between older pagan beliefs and Christianity could be applied to different countries and parts of the world. Christianity arrived later in Scandinavia than in Britain - the Norse myths animated the Viking culture ( and the Wagnerian music used in the movie was based on Germanic and Norse mythology ). It was later still that Christianity fully arrive in Russia - paganism survived there much later into the middle ages. One of the reasons Christianity started to appeal to Scandinavians was due to the Crusades - their Norse god Thor was symbolized often with the sword - they even tried to argue that the sword and the cross were connected symbolically - which is an interesting stretch - in fact you don't even see symbols of Christianity per se - you just hear Merlin speak about how the old gods only live on in people's minds. The story is transmitted visually and symbolically but that is often how "the word" of Christianity was conveyed - you don't see much reading and writing. The characters are living out their own myths and find themselves coming around to resolving the strife and conflict in their lives by adopting Christian like brotherhood, knightly honor, the quest for the Holy Grail - loss and betrayal - there's a pretty strong visceral feeling of living out human drama while still bound to earthly nature yet seeking a kind of universal spirit connection and communion.
Actually, they didn't even have kings or knights until after 1066. Arthur would've been a Celtic chieftain, and even the Germanic-Scandinavian Saxons had jarls and thanes (yes, just like in Skyrim).
4 года назад+1
Galahad was the best knight, in every official legend. His description is “the greatest and most perfect of all knights”. There is no debate over this.
The music, the glistening armor, the loyalty of Percival, the bravery of Arthur's knights, the beautiful landscapes... every time I watch this it moves me very deeply.
My absolute favorite too, I first watched this when I was 13, it hasn't left me since. Everything you mentioned, all the virtues are what's lacking not only in today's society but also in today's cinematography
+Andrew Fiedler Every now and then a phrase touches us all. When it does all we can do is react, live and grow. I hope I can grow when that phrase hits me. If it already has I hope I have.
@@johnhobson9165 I don't think he was lying; he was explaining to Arthur that he didn't (couldn't) cast the sword into the water...it was true that all he saw was the wind on the water, because without throwing the sword...of *course* he would see nothing except the wind and water. He then immediately explained that he couldn't allow Excalibur to be lost. Just because he described what happened slightly out of order doesn't mean he was telling a lie.
@@johnhobson9165 He wasn't though. He was stating that he didn't throw the sword in. So what Arthur wanted to hear (the Lady of the Lake rising to take the sword) wasn't there.
@@andreweff1284 Exactly therein liies the poetry. If he was technically lying or not, is collateral. Arthur seems to have directly understood him the way you interpreted it, which underlines, that if Percival tried to lie, he did it good, since Arthur wasn´t angry at him, he probably also just enjoyed the poetry, at that moment... ;-)
As a total work of art depicting the Arthurian legend, nobody has outdone this production. Hopefully someday it can be enhanced and re-released in high definition.
+8digitPDX aaaaaah.....but where's my obligatory Hollywood happy ending??? How dare they ?? Arthurian legend has always been a happy story about perfect people and idyllic lives!!!!
+Konrad Wallenrod Oh come off it; Arthur's earliest mentions include the strife at Camlann where he and "Medraut" both die, and we all know the Saxons won in the end
The sequence starting from 3:09 - simply majestic. The great Wagner music, change of key, the scene of the Lady in the Lake, Percival throwing the sword... I saw this in 1981 or early 1982 and STILL remember the exact moment I was in the theater watching this epic scene.
+Ed Vega , me too! This scene is just about perfect. Although I've always wondered what would have happened had Percival thrown Excalibur away from the Lady's arm...
This is one of my favourite scenes. Wagner's music is indeed very moving. That said their is a bit of a contradiction. Arthur is all about chivalry and Wagner was a Nazi
let me rephrase that. had he been around in Hitler's time he would have been called a Nazi. He was a anti semantic and a racist. It was no coincidence that the Nazi party adopted is music. Indeed Hitler was a massive fan of his
this movie was unforgettable. by far the best that depicted the arthurian legend. it had a surrealism about it that was simply magical. Rest in peace, Nigel Terry! You made arthur very real to us!
Fun fact: Boorman had his crew sit and watch Gilliam's 'Jabberwocky' a dozen times prior to making this film! It's rare that the Spirit of this land is evoked successfully in art, but Excalibur pulls it off! And as for Siegfried's Funeral March... utterly magnificent - if it doesn't move you, you must be dead!
The music at that point is the Nothung leitmotif - Siegfried’s sword in the Ring Cycle. The whole scene is built around Siegfried’s Funeral March from the end of Götterdämmerung.
When the sword disappears back into the water, we know that the magic is gone from the world. Not forever, just gone for now. One day a King will come and the sword will rise again.
NYCR Agreed, our current leaders act cowardly and resort to the most dishonorable of decisions. Such things are no way to inspire people to follow your example
That's how Hitler sold himself to the German people: as a reincarnation of the mythological hero Siegfried, the protagonist of Wagner's Der Ring Des Nibelungen.
I let my son watch this when he was about nine years old (skipped the sex scene though). Even at nine, he was totally transfixed on the movie. I watched him go through the emotion roller coaster I went through when I first watched it when I was his age in the early 80s. At the end he was totally silent with his mouth hanging open for about five minutes, then finally said “that movie was sad, but I loved it”. What a masterpiece of a movie that still stands the rest of time, even almost 40 years later.
Took a course in science fiction, in high school. Teacher always showed a film, that students would watch and study, to be tested on. We chose Excalibur to watch. He was disappointed but allowed it. We all had to have parents sign a permission slip, because he didn't want to have to edit the nudity out. Only one student didn't get parental permission, so he had to go to study hall during the viewings. This was in 1982.
Excalibur is one of the most underrated films of the 1980s. I saw it when it originally came out in theaters when I 14 and It still makes my top 10 of greatest movies ever made. Some of the best actors of our age made their debut in the masterpiece.
" Come father, let us embrace at last" This is filmmaking on a level we've sadly lost. Embrace these classic works of art, for you will never see their like again.
@@discotanzo In my eyes, this is THE King Arthur movie to watch. Meaning that thus far, this is the only movie to capture the legend in all the right ways
unforgettable - it was filmed in mostly in Ireland - most people thought Ireland was the end of the world. Nowadays people think of Game of Thrones as the first brilliant use of Irish landscape to tell these stories - I forgot how magical the Irish countryside looks. I've read that Brittany is just as amazing. Speaking of Game of Thrones - today is the day the final season ( and dreaded spoilers in the news - I'm usually slow to get around to watch GOT ).
this simple image with the sword held by the lady of the lake in front of the setting sun is worthy of a wagnerian opera. Absolute beauty. Best epic movie ever. One day a king will come and the sword will rise again.
It was actually Bedivere who returned the sword to the lake. Boorman combined the characters of Bedivere and Percival as they were important characters and he also wanted to touch on The Fisher King legend which featured Percival. Such a rich an varied legend with so many characters it’s amazing how much Boorman got into a two hour movie. A crowning achievement and a beautiful film
I've got to admit. This has always been one of my most favourite films. I was so upset that there was never a soundtrack for the movie so I ended up making my own, and thus, fell in love with classical music all over again.I also developed a mad crush on Nigel Terry and just realized from all the previous posts that he passed away earlier this year...so another heartbreak for me. ( I had always hoped I would meet him one day)
There WAS a soundtrack for the movie. I have a copy! Although a lot of Wagner & Orff are used, there is a surprising amount of original music made for the film by Trevor Jones - including Igrayne's wonderful dance music.
I was 13 when this came out. A couple friends and I were in one theater and snuck into the next one over to watch this. What an amazing movie. The acting, soundtrack, the fight scenes, costumes. Masterpiece! I've never seen another Arthur movie to even come close. Perfection!
Aside from the music... There's some of Akira Kurosara in John Boorman's film here, I gotta say. I've never heard anyone mention an influence, but I gotta wonder. This film really needs to get the high def, Blue Ray, whatever, it's REALLY effective if you can see the green (speaking as someone who's old enough to have seen this in a theatre!). It was filmed in Ireland and Boorman really used it's palate like a painter. Just a wonderful film in an era that didn't expect it.
Yes. Boorman really emphasized the green. Seems to have been a touchstone for him. He did the same in Deliverance and The Emerald Forest. All three are great, but Excalibur is in a class of its own.
Best King Arthur movie EVER, and there is no close second. I literally paraphrased Lancelots words to the queen to my wife at our wedding and melted everyone " I shall love you always as my wife, as my best friend, and as long as you live I shall love no other." Obviously I could not say exactly what he said, but I to this day quote many lines from this movie in plays and indies I do, and no one knows where I get such great lines from.
I dunno, I would argue Ridley Scott nailed atmosphere in Alien, Blade Runner, Legend and his first film The Duelists. Michael Mann nailed it in Last of the Mohicans. Denis Villeneuve's Sicario was pretty mind-blowing for atmosphere, and with any luck he'll nail it again in the rumored Dune remake.
@@johnschwab3749 All those movies you mentioned were made around the era Excalibur was made in the 1980's, early 1990's and not 7 years ago(2015) when the OP made his comment.
Just "re-discovered" this incredible film. Remember being in awe of it first time around not least because of how Wagner's music was interlaced in the various scenes. Absolutely one of the best films ever!
This film still gives me goosebumps & that shivery feeling of endorphins coursing through my body especially when lancelot appears in the final battle it's such an incredibly awesome portrait of love, betrayal, forgiveness, loyalty, friendship & hope seen it aged seven in 1986 & I'm still watching it age 40 in 2020. No film like it imo.
1984 I was a senior in Ms. Dennis' English class and she showed us both Apocalypse Now and this movie. This was when teachers taught by using great movies to explain what the writers were telling the viewers. I still know what an "Orphic Journey" is. Thanks for making English awesome class Ms. D!
Ken Honeycutt I have learned 3 things so far scrolling down the Comments. 1. In the legend of King Arthur, it was Sir Bedivere who threw the sword to the Lady of the Lake. 2. The 3 women in white who accompany the body of Arthur on the boat represent War, Fate and Death. They are rooted in the myth of the Morrigan- the Celtic Raven Goddess. 3. An Orphic Journey is one where an individual goes, metaphorically to hell and back. In Greek mythology, Orpheus travelled to the underworld and returned. The internet is a marvellous thing. 👍🏻
3:33 I don’t know how long Jon Boorman waited for this shot, but it was worth it. Some moments in cinema are iconic and unforgettable. This is undoubtedly one of them.
I read somewhere that Boorman's wife, who played the Lady of the Lake, was actually underwater during the filming of this scene and her other--without breathing aids. Boorman took so long through some takes that she nearly drowned...
Unfortunately it is. From what we know there was a leader of a war band called Artorius who might have been an Anglo-Saxon who might have died at the battle of Badon Hill. As you see, lots of conditionals and we don't even know where Badon Hill is!
Bubo 25 In America we adopt Indian (Native American) names and mythology for all sorts of stuff. Most army helicopters, many ships, names of towns and states, etc. Even though the creation of the Americas led to the downfall of native Indian society. So it's not out of sorts to adopt the best myths from local lore as your own, even if it's only yours by geography and not by blood relation.
This movie has a few faults...but it is a Cinematic Masterpiece. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Cinematography, and it Won the BAFTA Award for the same. The shot of Percival throwing Excalibur into the Lake and the Lady's hand comes up and catches it is absolutely beautiful
There’s such a feeling of prophecy and destiny in this movie. It’s like acknowledging that we already know what the result is going to be, what’s going to happen in our lives (birth, death, afterlife) so it focuses instead on how the characters all get there. A great melodramatic vision
This film is what drew me into loving cinematic musical scores. Love, love the music...love, love the film. None have, in my opinion, come better as far as depicting and honouring the Arthurian legend. I watch this over and over again, and it has the same effect as the first time - awesome!
Saw this movie in the theater at the time and it was quite impressive. The music is something have never forgotten. I looked it up and I have it now on my phone playlist. It’s from Richard Wagner and it is Sigfried’s funeral march.
Yeah I erroneously included them all as English. My mistake. I know for sure that the actress who portrayed Guinevere is Irish, As is Gabriel Byrne. As well as many of the extras, being it was filmed in Tipperary. Nicol Williamson was born in Scotland.
Dustin Mitchell And let's not forget Liam Neeson, who is Irish, or Patrick Stewart, who is Scottish. (And if we wanted to get really technical we could mention that Helen Mirren is Russian on her father's side.)
773SleepyHollow Oops, I see that I got Patrick Stewart wrong... I thought he was from Scotland, but he was born and raised in England. (As I guess you already knew.) Now, "Stewart" and his mother's maiden name (Barrowclough) are Scottish names, but google tells me that his family has been in England for a number of generations (on his mother's side at least, I didn't read much about his father's ancestors), so there's a good chance that he has a lot of English ancestry, perhaps more than his Scottish ancestry. At some point, of course, I guess you can say how much does it matter... some members of the Royal Family are more non-English than English in terms of the percentages of their ancestry, but hell, they're still English for practical purposes.
A great, great movie and ending scene! WOW the music at the end is so fitting for Arthur!! Back in the day when I saw it made me cry and still does, furthermore; needless to say I have this classic on dvd.
To this day, there is no movie that can match this Absolute Masterpiece !! it makes me cry everytime.... The legend of Arthur has never been told in a more profound and respectful way, the strength of every character, Arthur..., Merlin, Percival, Lancelot...Just Wonderful, Magnificent... !!! like Richard Wagner's score...
A movie that can NEVER be remade.
Agreed
I agreed too
Certainly not with the same actors
Don’t let Disney hear that.
@@joncooke9515 Indeed, Disney will cast Lizzo as Arthur and Timothee Chalamet as Guenievere, Lancelot to be likely played by a blind, wheelchair driving dual-amputee trans from Sri Lanka.
Here we are in 2023........ A movie so GREAT, it still hasn't been remade!
It can never be remade. Anything else would pale in comparison. The chemistry of the actors is just phenomenal.
no need to
Have a DVD of this, saw it when it first came out. Only 2004’s King Arthur is comparable. The music at the end was composed by Richard Wagner, whose music is used in many movies.
Give Disney time to redo it and make it Woke. I’m not counting The Sword and the Stone because that is a family friendly movie.
@@garcia207Disney would never remake this.
Everyone is white and there are only two women. One cheats on her husband with his best friend and the other screws her brother.
That final extreme long shot of the barge carrying Arthur to Avalon, is one of the most beautiful endings in cinema.
A scene that not even CGI could improve
How did they even do it with the sun shining on that one spot? Magical scene
goosebumps.............
It is.
⭐
If there is a movie that takes me back to the 80s and the dark ages, this is it. I have watched this movie a 100 times over the years.
They don’t make movies like this anymore. And sadly probably never will.
One of the greatest scenes ever filmed. The men, the music, the moment, the 'Lady in the Lake'. Emotional and powerful, it stands the test of time just like the legend......
Well said friend.
Those scenes have a definite finality to them. We know that Arthur's journey is over and his story is at an end.
The sword.
@@evertonporter7887 "definite finality" No, my friend, and I just realized it for the first time. Percival casts Excalibur to the Lady of the Lake, and she takes it away for safe-keeping, to Wagner's theme for Seigfried's funeral. It is not lost, Arthur had explained, "One day...the Sword will rise again." But when Percival returns to Arthur to make his report, Arthur himself is lost--until Percival sees him being taken away across the Lake to the same theme. Because Arthur's full quote is "One day a King will come, and the Sword will rise again," I believe Boorman's intent here is to indicate that Arthur himself will be that retuning King, as foreshadowed by Guinevere's keeping of the Sword for him against his return from the Wilderness.
I am constantly amazed at the profound insights this story reveals.
The once, and future king.
That moment when the Lady extends her hand out of the water, waiting for the sword, gives me chills through my spine. What a beautiful ending.
It's not any good
@@uwebiernacki It isn't any good and you'd know that if you branched out. It doesn't even have original music.
@@Siegfried5846 you're alone with your "opinion". This scene is a masterpiece. And Wagner's music fits perfectly.
You wouldn't complain about "Ride of the valkyries" being used in the iconic "Apocalypse now" scene, would you?
And keep in mind this is a 42y movie-scene uploaded in shitty quality to youtube.
It doesn't do it justice even the slightest...
@@uwebiernacki Yes, I would complain about that. Wagner deserves better than to be associated with mass murder by deranged, leftist communists in "Apocalypse Now", or with violent, distasteful, doomsday prophesies by deranged, rightist theocrats in "Excalibur".
@@uwebiernackiwell said! 😉👍
The frame where the Lady of the Lake holds Excalibur for a moment before taking it into the water is a masterpiece of three-point composition. The sword and her arm are off-center in the frame (and perfectly, elegantly straight), the setting sun to the right above (is it setting or is it rising? ), the lake completing the foreground...it's cinematic beauty the likes of which we seldom see anymore. And the smooth, sudden motion with which the arm and sword slip under the water with barely a ripple, all timed to Wagner's beautiful score! Like many of you, I also saw this in 1981. I was 13, I had just read Lord of the Rings for the first time that year, I was enraptured by the realm of fantasy, and then I saw this!
Concider yourself lucky, that even at the young age of 13, you began this trip with a film for adults, instead of a children-film/subject, like LOTR. I watched it around 1986, being 7, and that spared me watching LOTR, cause I then was 22, and an adult... ;-)
A beautiful time to be alive. I was slightly younger at 7.
I tear up every time I watch it. The image and the music… beautiful beyond words.
Yes this. Played such a formative role in my tastes.
Arthur dies at dawn (Tennyson, Idylls Of The King)
Spare a thought for Perceval. The humblest knight; a peasant. The most loyal, true and chivalric of them all. He did not fall as Lancelot did. The only one to come back from the grail quest. The only one to bear witness to Arthur’s passing to Avalon. The only one to watch as magic fades from the world. The only one who will bring Arthur’s legend to the world. The loneliness incomparable he must feel.
Let’s not forget he stood in for Lancelot for the Queen when he was just a Squire.
Perceval is an amazing character, sad to he saw the end of all but then again all things must come to an end.
Not mention the last one to hold Excalibur and his last quest was to return it.
I cry every time.
Pure of heart.
Percival is now and always will be my favorite Knight of The Round Table.
Rest in Peace Nigel Terry. You were an AMAZING Arthur Pendragon
Nigel Terry played Arthur...not Uther.
susan leitch read it again
Yes, although some people deny it, King Arthur was also called Arthur Pendragon.
He is the ONLY one I think about when I hear "King Arthur"
didn't know he was gone. Requiescat in pace. Rex quondam, rex futurus - hic iacet supultus in insula Avolonia inclitus rex Arturus.
The climax as Percival throws the sword sailing end over end against the dark forestry background, music at its richest, and the Lady of the Lake catches it.... Holds it high momentarily, then takes it under is simply incredible. Chills every time.
By far the best King Arthur movie I've ever seen. I have never forgotten feelings of pure ecstasy at this grand finale. Masterpiece
MAJESTIC. Still, one of the most moving moments in in cinema history... All of it. The acting, scenes, music.. Will we ever see the likes of this version of Arthur again. God bless the late Nigel Terry.
It is not good at all! This is theft!
Percival is really the greatest Knight in this version of the Legend, he stays true to Arthur until the end.
You oaf! What a despicable thing to say about one of the greatest myths.
"This version" doesn't exist outside of this film. Two large changes in this scene alone: Arthur spears Mordred who runs up the spear and slashes Arthur on the head with his sword and the last surviving knight is Bedivere not Percival.
""This version" doesn't exist outside of this film." They didn't even have knight's armor for 800 years or more later after Arthur's time. Also there were elements from other stories - Athur placing his sword
between Lancelot and Guinevere was from Tristan and Isolt. These are tímeless myths - the theme of transitioning between older pagan beliefs and Christianity could be applied to different countries and parts of the world. Christianity arrived later in Scandinavia than in Britain - the Norse myths animated the Viking culture ( and the Wagnerian music used in the movie was based on Germanic and Norse mythology ). It was later still that Christianity fully arrive in Russia - paganism survived there much later
into the middle ages.
One of the reasons Christianity started to appeal to Scandinavians was due to the Crusades - their Norse god Thor was symbolized often with the sword - they even tried to argue that the sword and the
cross were connected symbolically - which is an interesting stretch - in fact you don't even see symbols of Christianity per se - you just hear Merlin speak about how the old gods only live on in people's minds.
The story is transmitted visually and symbolically but that is often how "the word" of Christianity was conveyed - you don't see much reading and writing. The characters are living out their own myths and
find themselves coming around to resolving the strife and conflict in their lives by adopting Christian like
brotherhood, knightly honor, the quest for the Holy Grail - loss and betrayal - there's a pretty strong visceral feeling of living out human drama while still bound to earthly nature yet seeking a kind of universal spirit connection and communion.
Actually, they didn't even have kings or knights until after 1066. Arthur would've been a Celtic chieftain, and even the Germanic-Scandinavian Saxons had jarls and thanes (yes, just like in Skyrim).
Galahad was the best knight, in every official legend. His description is “the greatest and most perfect of all knights”. There is no debate over this.
The music, the glistening armor, the loyalty of Percival, the bravery of Arthur's knights, the beautiful landscapes... every time I watch this it moves me very deeply.
You are not kidding. This movie was way ahead of its time. Soundtrack score and all.
wow! lucky you and i mean that truly.
one of my ABSOLUTE fvourite Movies ...
My absolute favorite too, I first watched this when I was 13, it hasn't left me since. Everything you mentioned, all the virtues are what's lacking not only in today's society but also in today's cinematography
Very well said. Thank you for articulating what I could not do myself about this film.
The only good King Arthur film ever made in my opinion....
pspboy7 the only one!
pspboy7 you have to admit, using wagner as the OST really makes a difference
pspboy7 What of Disney's The Sword in the Stone or Knights of the Round Table
pspboy7 Im here, don't worry :) when time comes... I will come back XD
pspboy7 Not Monty Python and the Holy Grail?
Okay, Excalibur is the best *serious* King Arthur film...
I watched it so many times that the VHS tape wore out. This ending is still the best!
I'm 51 and I have watched this movie so many times and today it is still a magnificent piece of work
"I saw nothing...but the wind on the water."
For whatever reason, I find this quote amazingly poetic in its integrity.
+Andrew Fiedler Every now and then a phrase touches us all. When it does all we can do is react, live and grow.
I hope I can grow when that phrase hits me. If it already has I hope I have.
Even though Percival is lying.
@@johnhobson9165 I don't think he was lying; he was explaining to Arthur that he didn't (couldn't) cast the sword into the water...it was true that all he saw was the wind on the water, because without throwing the sword...of *course* he would see nothing except the wind and water. He then immediately explained that he couldn't allow Excalibur to be lost.
Just because he described what happened slightly out of order doesn't mean he was telling a lie.
@@johnhobson9165 He wasn't though. He was stating that he didn't throw the sword in. So what Arthur wanted to hear (the Lady of the Lake rising to take the sword) wasn't there.
@@andreweff1284 Exactly therein liies the poetry. If he was technically lying or not, is collateral. Arthur seems to have directly understood him the way you interpreted it, which underlines, that if Percival tried to lie, he did it good, since Arthur wasn´t angry at him, he probably also just enjoyed the poetry, at that moment... ;-)
As a total work of art depicting the Arthurian legend, nobody has outdone this production. Hopefully someday it can be enhanced and re-released in high definition.
+8digitPDX this is closest to god in scence of movies
..yes..i believe this is John Boorman's best film..
+8digitPDX
aaaaaah.....but where's my obligatory Hollywood happy ending??? How dare they ?? Arthurian legend has always been a happy story about perfect people and idyllic lives!!!!
Say Hello to Batman v Superman ;-)
+Konrad Wallenrod Oh come off it; Arthur's earliest mentions include the strife at Camlann where he and "Medraut" both die, and we all know the Saxons won in the end
"One day, a King will come and the sword will rise".
I reckon it's time for that King.
Prince Charles!
Its price william the one and true next king
its trump
I reckon it's time you grew up.
King Harry with a Nazi-uniform...
Saw this movie as a child in 1981. 40+ years later it still remains the best Arthurian legend movie ever made.
I cry
I have yet to sit my boys down with this one after watching Seven Deadly Sins and its spinoff.
Same
The sequence starting from 3:09 - simply majestic. The great Wagner music, change of key, the scene of the Lady in the Lake, Percival throwing the sword... I saw this in 1981 or early 1982 and STILL remember the exact moment I was in the theater watching this epic scene.
+Ed Vega , me too! This scene is just about perfect. Although I've always wondered what would have happened had Percival thrown Excalibur away from the Lady's arm...
Hahaha, maybe the arm would have stretched?
This is one of my favourite scenes. Wagner's music is indeed very moving. That said their is a bit of a contradiction. Arthur is all about chivalry and Wagner was a Nazi
+john lewis umm Wagner died in 1883
let me rephrase that. had he been around in Hitler's time he would have been called a Nazi. He was a anti semantic and a racist. It was no coincidence that the Nazi party adopted is music. Indeed Hitler was a massive fan of his
this movie was unforgettable. by far the best that depicted the arthurian legend. it had a surrealism about it that was simply magical. Rest in peace, Nigel Terry! You made arthur very real to us!
Using Wagner was brilliant. I seriously get teary-eyed everytime I see this.
Could never use that music today what happened to our world
@@billpryor8764 why not?
@@joydivsion77 The woke would declare it fascist.
@@dougbrowne9890 The woke can kiss my ass.
@@dougbrowne9890 Get real.
Made me cry as a little boy, makes me cry as a man , and its hard for me to cry
+Jason Artiga me too. wonderful movie!
It stirs the heart I cry every time as well this movie will never be matched.Perfect music score perfect acting.
+Jason Artiga this movie gets to me in a way very few do.
+Jason Artiga
the ultimate guy-cry movie!
why is it hard for you to cry?
That red orange sun is hauntingly beautiful. I think of this scene every time I see one.
One of the greatest films ever made a true Epic
I would love to see this in a theater full of hardcore fans… the sword shall rise again….
Let's sort that out!
I saw this movie in a theater when it was released. Great moment of cinéma 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
I saw it opening weekend when I was 8. As memorable as seeing Star Wars a few years before. I love this movie.
I can't watch this without crying like a baby.
Fun fact: Boorman had his crew sit and watch Gilliam's 'Jabberwocky' a dozen times prior to making this film!
It's rare that the Spirit of this land is evoked successfully in art, but Excalibur pulls it off! And as for Siegfried's Funeral March... utterly magnificent - if it doesn't move you, you must be dead!
no way!!!!! i love jaberwocky- i'll rewatch it to see the connection!\
And all the while this is playing out, the sun behind is setting on the dream of Camelot. And that last scene? Straight out of a medieval tapestry.
For me the chills start at 2:36 when Arthur says 'the sword will rise again", and Wagner's music turns towards the crescendo.
The music at that point is the Nothung leitmotif - Siegfried’s sword in the Ring Cycle. The whole scene is built around Siegfried’s Funeral March from the end of Götterdämmerung.
When the sword disappears back into the water, we know that the magic is gone from the world. Not forever, just gone for now. One day a King will come and the sword will rise again.
I can't see that happening anytime soon...........
Sad but true.
Hope.........
Yes and soon
That England was Fatally wounded in 1914 😢
The sword did rise again it was made by Rolls Royce, Hawkers and Supermarine.
We need King Arthur and Excalibur now, more then ever.
NYCR Fear not! I have come!
NYCR Agreed, our current leaders act cowardly and resort to the most dishonorable of decisions
NYCR Agreed, our current leaders act cowardly and resort to the most dishonorable of decisions.
Such things are no way to inspire people to follow your example
Ron Inbar
Excuse me?
That's how Hitler sold himself to the German people: as a reincarnation of the mythological hero Siegfried, the protagonist of Wagner's Der Ring Des Nibelungen.
I let my son watch this when he was about nine years old (skipped the sex scene though). Even at nine, he was totally transfixed on the movie. I watched him go through the emotion roller coaster I went through when I first watched it when I was his age in the early 80s.
At the end he was totally silent with his mouth hanging open for about five minutes, then finally said “that movie was sad, but I loved it”.
What a masterpiece of a movie that still stands the rest of time, even almost 40 years later.
Took a course in science fiction, in high school. Teacher always showed a film, that students would watch and study, to be tested on. We chose Excalibur to watch. He was disappointed but allowed it. We all had to have parents sign a permission slip, because he didn't want to have to edit the nudity out. Only one student didn't get parental permission, so he had to go to study hall during the viewings. This was in 1982.
Excalibur is one of the most underrated films of the 1980s. I saw it when it originally came out in theaters when I 14 and It still makes my top 10 of greatest movies ever made. Some of the best actors of our age made their debut in the masterpiece.
" Come father, let us embrace at last"
This is filmmaking on a level we've sadly lost. Embrace these classic works of art, for you will never see their like again.
That was Robert Addie. He later was cast in Robin Of Sherwood TV series as Guy of Gisburne. Addie died in 2003 at the age of 43 of lung cancer.
Amen
@@dalemcilwain He was superb as Mordred and Guy of Gisburne.
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Of Course. I've seen both.
I don't know why the final image of Arthur on the ship is so powerful to me. It's like an emotional hammer.
I so agree. It looks like a pre-Raphaelite painting.
Amazing ending.
happy to see you're also a fan of this fantastic movie!
This is what we call a Master piece
@@discotanzo In my eyes, this is THE King Arthur movie to watch. Meaning that thus far, this is the only movie to capture the legend in all the right ways
@@sadlobster1 I couldn't say it better.
unforgettable - it was filmed in mostly in Ireland - most people thought Ireland was the end of the world. Nowadays people think of Game of Thrones as the first brilliant use of Irish landscape to tell these stories - I forgot how magical the Irish countryside looks. I've read that Brittany is just as amazing. Speaking of Game of Thrones - today is the day the final season ( and dreaded spoilers in the news - I'm usually slow to get around to watch GOT ).
I came here when I heard Paul Geoffrey, the actor who plays Percival, died last week from cancer aged only 68.
I'm just now responding. He was the servant and hero of this tale.
I am 53 and this is still my favorite movie of my life time..
this simple image with the sword held by the lady of the lake in front of the setting sun is worthy of a wagnerian opera. Absolute beauty. Best epic movie ever. One day a king will come and the sword will rise again.
It was actually Bedivere who returned the sword to the lake. Boorman combined the characters of Bedivere and Percival as they were important characters and he also wanted to touch on The Fisher King legend which featured Percival. Such a rich an varied legend with so many characters it’s amazing how much Boorman got into a two hour movie. A crowning achievement and a beautiful film
I've got to admit. This has always been one of my most favourite films. I was so upset that there was never a soundtrack for the movie so I ended up making my own, and thus, fell in love with classical music all over again.I also developed a mad crush on Nigel Terry and just realized from all the previous posts that he passed away earlier this year...so another heartbreak for me. ( I had always hoped I would meet him one day)
There WAS a soundtrack for the movie. I have a copy! Although a lot of Wagner & Orff are used, there is a surprising amount of original music made for the film by Trevor Jones - including Igrayne's wonderful dance music.
Seen this film so many times, my number one favourite film of all time
Seigfreid's Funeral March by Wagner made this scene. Good stuff!
I was 13 when this came out. A couple friends and I were in one theater and snuck into the next one over to watch this. What an amazing movie. The acting, soundtrack, the fight scenes, costumes. Masterpiece! I've never seen another Arthur movie to even come close. Perfection!
Rest in peace, Nigel Terry! The best Arthur.
Aside from the music... There's some of Akira Kurosara in John Boorman's film here, I gotta say. I've never heard anyone mention an influence, but I gotta wonder. This film really needs to get the high def, Blue Ray, whatever, it's REALLY effective if you can see the green (speaking as someone who's old enough to have seen this in a theatre!). It was filmed in Ireland and Boorman really used it's palate like a painter. Just a wonderful film in an era that didn't expect it.
Yes. Boorman really emphasized the green. Seems to have been a touchstone for him. He did the same in Deliverance and The Emerald Forest. All three are great, but Excalibur is in a class of its own.
The whole sequence was perfect. The way the woman's arm glides up smooth as silk and just as clean slips back with the sword. Absolutely perfect.
Best King Arthur movie EVER, and there is no close second. I literally paraphrased Lancelots words to the queen to my wife at our wedding and melted everyone " I shall love you always as my wife, as my best friend, and as long as you live I shall love no other." Obviously I could not say exactly what he said, but I to this day quote many lines from this movie in plays and indies I do, and no one knows where I get such great lines from.
It's a shame that Arthur's best film after this masterpiece was: Monty Python and the Holy Grail. and it's a humorous movie.
The other remake was pretty good, just saying
The cinematography and soundtrack combine to make this of the best films ever made
That sword went straight down it didn’t falter, sway of shake. Such a MAGNIFICENT composition!!
No other movie OOZES atmosphere like this classic.Others try and others fail.
They don't make movies like they use too.
I dunno, I would argue Ridley Scott nailed atmosphere in Alien, Blade Runner, Legend and his first film The Duelists. Michael Mann nailed it in Last of the Mohicans. Denis Villeneuve's Sicario was pretty mind-blowing for atmosphere, and with any luck he'll nail it again in the rumored Dune remake.
@@johnschwab3749 All those movies you mentioned were made around the era Excalibur was made in the 1980's, early 1990's and not 7 years ago(2015) when the OP made his comment.
@@johnschwab3749 "Alien" was 1979. "Excalibur" was 1981. "Blade Runner" 1982. His point is well taken.
Epic. No other word describes this movie.
0:34 I've watched this film a dozen+ times, on TV, VHS, then DVD, and only now noticed that the lance that skewered Arthur mysteriously disappears.
Nicol Williamson steals the show as Merlin. He gets all the quotable lines! :D "That's it!"
I always thought it was sir alec guiness
Just "re-discovered" this incredible film. Remember being in awe of it first time around not least because of how Wagner's music was interlaced in the various scenes. Absolutely one of the best films ever!
I never knew this was Wagner, very fitting sounds somewhat in the mists of time
I love that Percival rides to the lake, but can't bring himself to throw the sword away until he has reassurance from Arthur.
In Malory and Tennyson, Sir Bedevere throws Excalibur into the lake. He is the only Round Table knight left.
The incredible music! This film!
3:32 one of the most beautifull scene of any picture ever!!
bone chilling
Masterpiece. We need a 4K UHD release of Excalibur 1981.
This film still gives me goosebumps & that shivery feeling of endorphins coursing through my body especially when lancelot appears in the final battle it's such an incredibly awesome portrait of love, betrayal, forgiveness, loyalty, friendship & hope seen it aged seven in 1986 & I'm still watching it age 40 in 2020. No film like it imo.
1984 I was a senior in Ms. Dennis' English class and she showed us both Apocalypse Now and this movie. This was when teachers taught by using great movies to explain what the writers were telling the viewers. I still know what an "Orphic Journey" is. Thanks for making English awesome class Ms. D!
Ken Honeycutt I have learned 3 things so far scrolling down the Comments.
1. In the legend of King Arthur, it was Sir Bedivere who threw the sword to the Lady of the Lake.
2. The 3 women in white who accompany the body of Arthur on the boat represent War, Fate and Death. They are rooted in the myth of the Morrigan- the Celtic Raven Goddess.
3. An Orphic Journey is one where an individual goes, metaphorically to hell and back. In Greek mythology, Orpheus travelled to the underworld and returned.
The internet is a marvellous thing. 👍🏻
If this film doesn't bring a tear or hairs standing on end then you are soulless.
agree with you
3:33 I don’t know how long Jon Boorman waited for this shot, but it was worth it. Some moments in cinema are iconic and unforgettable. This is undoubtedly one of them.
I read somewhere that Boorman's wife, who played the Lady of the Lake, was actually underwater during the filming of this scene and her other--without breathing aids. Boorman took so long through some takes that she nearly drowned...
@@gpwerner yes i’ve heard that tale too
I still love this film.
Unsurpassed, brilliance! The casting, sheer, perfection. The music,stirring.A cinematic, masterpiece.
Took me years to work out that the accompanying orchestration is Wagner's 'Siegfried's funeral march'. It fits this last scene so well! 🎼👏🏾⭐❤
I'm sure that the superman music would fit the Spiderman films. Does that mean that it would have been alright to use it? No, it's theft.
I was in middle school when this movie came out... still one of my favorite movies!!
Got to hand it to England. They've got one of the best origin myths out there as most countries go.
Unfortunately it is. From what we know there was a leader of a war band called Artorius who might have been an Anglo-Saxon who might have died at the battle of Badon Hill. As you see, lots of conditionals and we don't even know where Badon Hill is!
Bubo 25 In America we adopt Indian (Native American) names and mythology for all sorts of stuff. Most army helicopters, many ships, names of towns and states, etc. Even though the creation of the Americas led to the downfall of native Indian society. So it's not out of sorts to adopt the best myths from local lore as your own, even if it's only yours by geography and not by blood relation.
Instead you got Cromwell and Churchill, and the world still suffers.
Trazan Apansson Churchill.?
Too bad a lot of it actually came from the French... :P
This movie has a few faults...but it is a Cinematic Masterpiece. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Cinematography, and it Won the BAFTA Award for the same. The shot of Percival throwing Excalibur into the Lake and the Lady's hand comes up and catches it is absolutely beautiful
There’s such a feeling of prophecy and destiny in this movie. It’s like acknowledging that we already know what the result is going to be, what’s going to happen in our lives (birth, death, afterlife) so it focuses instead on how the characters all get there. A great melodramatic vision
This film is what drew me into loving cinematic musical scores. Love, love the music...love, love the film. None have, in my opinion, come better as far as depicting and honouring the Arthurian legend. I watch this over and over again, and it has the same effect as the first time - awesome!
Saw this movie in the theater at the time and it was quite impressive. The music is something have never forgotten. I looked it up and I have it now on my phone playlist. It’s from Richard Wagner and it is Sigfried’s funeral march.
This rendition of the legend is the ultimate one. No one can hold a candle to John Boorman's excellent portrayal.
Please ffs release this on a big screen! My local cinema keeps releasing 80's classics, THIS IS THE BEST!!!!!!!
Excalibur ending set to Wagner's Gotterdammerung. One of the greatest films in recent history with some of the greatest English actors.
English, Scottish, Irish, and probably Welsh actors.
Yeah I erroneously included them all as English. My mistake. I know for sure that the actress who portrayed Guinevere is Irish, As is Gabriel Byrne. As well as many of the extras, being it was filmed in Tipperary. Nicol Williamson was born in Scotland.
Dustin Mitchell
And let's not forget Liam Neeson, who is Irish, or Patrick Stewart, who is Scottish. (And if we wanted to get really technical we could mention that Helen Mirren is Russian on her father's side.)
773SleepyHollow
Oops, I see that I got Patrick Stewart wrong... I thought he was from Scotland, but he was born and raised in England. (As I guess you already knew.)
Now, "Stewart" and his mother's maiden name (Barrowclough) are Scottish names, but google tells me that his family has been in England for a number of generations (on his mother's side at least, I didn't read much about his father's ancestors), so there's a good chance that he has a lot of English ancestry, perhaps more than his Scottish ancestry.
At some point, of course, I guess you can say how much does it matter... some members of the Royal Family are more non-English than English in terms of the percentages of their ancestry, but hell, they're still English for practical purposes.
yes great flick and soundtrack,the ending is the best..super actors in this....
A great, great movie and ending scene! WOW the music at the end is so fitting for Arthur!! Back in the day when I saw it made me cry and still does, furthermore; needless to say I have this classic on dvd.
This was always a highly underrated movie, much better than many gave it credit for and far superior to the vast majority of current film fare.
Wagner, sublime!!
A masterpiece of film
I keep coming back to this. Such a fantastic movie, great actors & great music score.
Glorious, magnificent ending. One of the purest unions of sound and sight. Rest in peace Nigel Terry.
Amen
I was a wee lad when I saw this first... It changed my perspective of movies and music... for my whole life
"one day a king will come and the sword will rise again"
Arthur, we need you now more than ever.
That applies to Hitler
2022: still a F'ing masterpiece 🙏
To this day, there is no movie that can match this Absolute Masterpiece !! it makes me cry everytime.... The legend of Arthur has never been told in a more profound and respectful way, the strength of every character, Arthur..., Merlin, Percival, Lancelot...Just Wonderful, Magnificent... !!! like Richard Wagner's score...
It was theft to use Wagner's music.
There are also better films, such as Lord of the Rings, Conan the Barbarian and the Dark Knight trilogy.
I saw this film on the big screen when it came out. That last scene stays with me. Thank you.
Gives me shivers watching this ..
Incredible movie. So mythic and lofty and grand. It’s so earnest and shows without telling.
One of the most underestimated movies!!! So 👍 GREAT!!!!
True cinematic skill and talent, those days are lost forever
One of the best movies...
Truly a staggering piece of art...I love you John Boorman...just these few minutes are amazing
I'm not crying, YOU'RE crying!
Damn right I'm crying. Every time.
Gay
@@luisr.6543 Chad *
My absolute number one favourite movie.
This film is a classic and deserves a hi definition bluray release like once upon a time in America!
This was perfection - pure perfection.
Phil.