
Timothée Chalamet
Hal
Joel Edgerton
Falstaff
Sean Harris
William
Tom Glynn-Carney
Hotspur
Lily-Rose Depp
Catherine
Thomasin McKenzie
Philippa, Queen of Denmark
Robert Pattinson
The Dauphin
Ben Mendelsohn
King Henry IV
Andrew Havill
Archbishop of Canterbury
Dean-Charles Chapman
Thomas
Steven Elder
Dorset
Edward Ashley
Cambridge
Stephen Fewell
Grey
Tara Fitzgerald
Hooper
Tom Fisher
Northumberland
Tom Lawrence
Westmoreland
Ivan Kaye
Scrope
Gábor Czap
Scot Soldier
Josef Davies
Beale
Roderick Hill
Cloaked Man
Niké Kurta
Molly
Nicholas Wittman
Herald
Philip Rosch
Lord Chamberlain
Lucas Hansen
Eric, King of Denmark
Tom Lacroix
Assassin
Cedric Cirotteau
French Envoy
Jack Bandeira
Cambridge's Steward
Kristóf Widder
Clergyman
Vincent Latorre
Jean D'Estouteville
Bence Bakti
Boy #1
Bardó Fenyvesi
Boy #2
Henry Dent
Boy #3
Harry Trevaldwyn
Dartmouth
Laurent Winkler
French Commander
Jeremy Chevillotte
French Lord Steward
Thibault de Montalembert
King Charles VI
Oscar Bennett
William's Page Boy






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- #hundred years' war
- #historical fiction
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- #mentor protégé relationship
- #king of england
- #costume drama
- #15th century
- #british monarchy
- #medieval england
- #father son relationship
- #medieval france
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Reviews

At last an opportunity to see Timothée Chalamet doing something a little grittier. Sadly, t'was not to be. His portrayal of this great character from early 15th Century British history left me cold. He looked like a good meal would have killed him, never mind a bloodthirsty foe clad in iron armed with an axe. The accent held up reasonably well, but he still struggles to shake off the winsome, "but
It’s a fine half-adaptation, but suffers from the compromise it makes. On the one hand, it is not simply another adaptation of Shakespeare - it has the advantages of taking a fresh look at the material, but for whatever reason still somehow carried across much of the fictional elements of Shakespeare’s plays. At the same time, whilst the writing is good, it lacks the poetry of a more straight a

Just finished The King, a modern interpretation of parts of Shakespeare's Henry IV and Henry V, seemingly targeted at millennials. It's common knowledge that much of Shakespeare's Henry V is based on hearsay, yet his pre-battle speeches at Barfleur ('Once more unto the breach, dear friends, once more.') and Agincourt ('We band of brothers') have become the stuff of legend and remain the most st












