Second viewing; first viewing with original audio and in widescreen; previously viewed on February 24, 1994.
It's the 11th century. A Norman knight is given a village to rule. He takes a local woman for a wife who was engaged to a local man, who then goes for help to the Frisians, who have long had designs on the village, and whose Prince's son is being held captive in the Norman castle.
Although possibly not a great film, there are several awesome things in this historical (or should we say half-historical, half-mythical?) drama. The pagan props (masks, sculptures, etc.) are really cool. The performances are uniformly good. The battle and siege sequences are very well made. The drama is thought-provoking (e.g., is using one's power to take a wife really rape when the woman does not object, and was actually escaping a marriage which was socially enforced?). It does not make for a consistently exciting viewing, though, perhaps because the situations are somewhat repetitive and the development is somewhat predictable.
Rating: 54 (up from 48)
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