Knights of the Round Table

*
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (1953) Dir. Richard Thorpe
114 min. / Eastmancolor / 2.55:1 / DTS-HD MA 2.0 Mono / SDH
Warner Archive BD $24.99

Available from Movie Zyng

The familiar story of Le Morte d'Arthur, told in regal splendor and "color magnificence," it says here. Arthur yanks the sword from yonder stone and sets about uniting England, but his half-brother Modred and the scheming Morgan Le Fay have plans of their own, while Artie's trusted best friend and most accomplished knight, Lancelot, and Queen Guinevere can't stop making googoo eyes at each other, despite Merlin's warnings and SAY, we all know this story already, but in 1953 they hadn’t seen it like THIS: the very first MGM CinemaScope production.

Technicolor sword adventures of the 1950s is one of our favorite genres, and this film is VERY big and VERY colorful, with lavish sets and locales (filmed in England and Scotland) and a million-dollar cast and there's certainly nothing WRONG with it, but honestly, it lacks the over-the-top audacity of the best matinee adventure films of its era and it pays a little too much attention to the romance and too little on giving us the comic-book goofiness that made The Black Shield of Farnsworth,  Prince Valiant and The Adventures of Hajji Baba true favorites in the Balcony. Knights has its moments (I loved the sequence where Arthur meets Lancelot and they battle until they're just too tired to continue, so they decide to be friends instead) and the pageantry and color really are gorgeous. Giving Merlin and Morgan some real magic would've been nice; they each are really more snoops than sorcerers. Mainly, though, I think it's the cast that put the skids on this being a very good film instead of a great one; I've never been a Robert Taylor guy (nothin' WRONG with him, either, but he just isn't my type), Ava Gardner is all wrong for Guinevere (hey, if you look fast you'll see Dana Wynter as a ladies maid, how good would SHE have been), and Mel Ferrer plays second banana to Lancelot for the whole film and is a rather uncharismatic King Arthur.

Million-dollar Dialog:
Lancelot to the Lady Elaine as he prepares to battle the stranger he doesn't know is Arthur: "I’ll be with you in the passing of a minute."

Arthur: "Take care she does not witness the passing of a knight!"

(See what he did there?)

The new Blu-ray is up to the usual Warner Archives standards which is about the highest praise one can give a release these days, and includes a newsreel on the premiere of the film, plus about 8 min. of red carpet talk from that night with MGM stars and other celebrities (including Debbie Reynolds and Lex Barker, but not together) and a wonderful one-reel CinemaScope concert performance by the MGM Studio Orchestra, plus what I think are new to this release, a brief introduction by Mr. Ferrer and a vintage Droopy knight cartoon.

Maybe this one won’t ever be an all-time favorite, but It's a good, colorful, very wide movie and it goes well with popcorn on a Saturday afternoon.

No force of evil was strong enough to prevail against the chivalry of the Round Table!”