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Director: Kenneth Branagh, 1989
This film offers a brilliant presentation of the Shakespeare play about the Lancastrian
English king who led an army into France during the Hundred Years War. Along the way,
young king Hal must struggle with the sinking morale of his troops and his own inner
doubts. The film culminates at the bloody Battle of Agincourt in 1415. Considered by
some to be the best ever screen adaptation of Shakespeare. © MGM/UA
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Director: Fred Zinnemann, 1966
A screen version of the play by Robert Bolt. Henry VIII seeks a divorce from his wife
Catherine against the wishes of the Church and thus needs the support of the English
legal establishment and members of his own court. Sir Thomas More, Henry’s Lord
Chancellor and friend, must choose between compromising his principles or risking his
life by defying the king's wishes. Brilliantly written and acted, this film won six
Academy Awards and is considered by many to be among the greatest films ever. © Sony Pictures
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Director: Charles Jarrott, 1969
This film centers on the desire by Henry VIII to sire a male heir and preserve the Tudor
succession. The well known events of the "King's Great Matter" are vividly presented as
Henry seeks to rid himself of his first wife Catherine and marry young Anne Boleyn.
The resulting political and religious crisis changes England forever. Compelling
performances given of key characters. Based on the 1948 play by Maxwell Anderson.
© MCA Home Video
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Director: Trevor Nunn, 1986
The death of Henry VIII in 1547 plunges his kingdom into a chaotic succession dispute
that is exacerbated when his sickly son Edward VI is on his deathbed six years later.
Anxious to keep England Protestant, Edward's scheming minister Northumberland marries
off his son to teen-aged Lady Jane Grey, who he places on the throne after Edward dies.
Despite numerous liberties taken with historical fact, this film offers a riveting
portrayal of Tudor politics and the manipulation of royal figures.
© Paramount
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Narrator: David Starkey, 2002
This docudrama was produced as a miniseries for British television and written and
narrated by David Starkey, a Cambridge historian and noted biographer of Elizabeth I.
It offers an entertaining and insightful blend of dramatic re-creations and incisive
commentary on the queen’s private life and historical legacy. It is vastly superior to
the feature films Elizabeth (1998) and The Golden Age (2007) which, though more
lavish and dramatic, are filled with historical fabrications.
© A&E Home Entertainment
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Director: Charles Jarrott, 1971
A thoughtful period epic, though like many films about Tudor and Stuart royalty it
often strays from historical accuracy in favor of dramatic effect. Nevertheless, the
portrayal of key characters is well rendered and the scenery and costumes are stunning.
Vanessa Redgrave stars as the beleaguered Scottish queen who must face the
anti-Catholic prejudices and resentment of her fellow Scots, a tempestuous love life, and
the plotting of her fearful and heirless Protestant cousin Elizabeth. © MCA Home Video
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Director: Coky Giedroyc, 2005
Filmed against a backdrop of some of Britain's most beautiful houses and landscapes,
this film explores the full sweep of Elizabeth's life: from her days of fear as a
sequestered princess and potential victim of her sister's spite, through her relationships
with Robert Dudley and William Cecil, her political maturation, triumph over the Spanish
Armada, and finally old age and her last, enigmatic relationship with her young protégé,
the Earl of Essex. © WGBH
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Director: Mandie Fletcher, 1986
The second season of the British sitcom, Black Adder, centers on Lord Edmund Blackadder, a descendant of Plantagenet royalty and a conniving courtier of Elizabeth I. Blackadder's attempts to become king by marrying the always-available virgin queen are thwarted by the presence of other competitors. Meanwhile he offers dryly cynical and insightful observations about those around him and the values and mores of the Elizabethan Age.
© BBC
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Director: Roland Emmerich, 2011
This political thriller and costume drama is based on the controversial fringe theory that it was in fact Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford, who penned William Shakespeare's plays and not the Bard himself. The film is set against the backdrop of the Essex Rebellion and the final years of the reign of Queen Elizabeth. A compelling drama likely to polarize viewers, it captures well the spirit of the age but is filled with historical and literary inaccuracies. © Columbia Pictures
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Director: Terrence Malick, 2005
This visually stunning film is set amid the first encounter of English and indigenous North
American cultures during the founding of the Jamestown settlement in Virginia in 1607.
A unique interpretation of the classic tale of Pocahontas and her relationships with
adventurer John Smith and aristocrat John Rolfe that take her from the untouched beauty
of the North American wilderness to the center of high society in Stuart England. © New Line Cinema
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Director: Ken Hughes, 1970
Disgusted with the religious policies of King Charles I, an English squire and Puritan
named Oliver Cromwell enters Parliament and, later, as a military commander and Lord
Protector ascends to heights of absolute power. This is a well rendered, albeit uneven,
film with many historical inaccuracies, but which nevertheless offers a compelling
portrayal of the turmoil of the English Civil War and the key figures involved. Alec
Guinness gives a brilliant performance as the insecure and aloof Charles I. © Sony Pictures
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Directors: Michael Custance and Brian Farnham, 1983
This miniseries begins in 1649, two years after King Charles I and his followers
have been defeated by the opposing Roundheads and as Oliver Cromwell, the country's
new leader, has moved to center stage. The aftermath of the English Civil War is
seen through the experiences of the Lacey family and their servants as the plot chronicles
the lives of a family divided by loyalties to King and Parliament.
© WGBH
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Director: Kevin Brownlow, 1975
This film centers on Gerrard Winstanley, the charismatic founder of a religious sect
called the "Diggers" that rejected private property and in 1649 set out to form a
commune outside of London and till the soil on the "common land". This film is not
overly dramatic and is a bit amateurish, but the filmmakers' desire to make it as
historically accurate as possible renders it an authentic and compelling (if understated)
portrayal of this important chapter in the English Revolution.
© Image Entertainment
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Director: Michael Hoffman, 1995
An interesting period piece about the rise, fall, and redemption of Robert Merivel, an
aspiring young London physician. Merivel is invited to join the royal court of Charles
II where he enjoys leisure, wealth, and romantic liaisons of someone well beyond his
social position. His fall from Charles' favor leads him from self-indulgence back to
his passion for medicine and a heroic desire to save his fellow Londoners during the
plague outbreak of 1665 and Great Fire of 1666. Based on the novel by Rose Tremain. © Miramax
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Director: Roger Gnoan M'Bala, 2000
In West Africa during the late 17th century, King Adanggaman leads a war against
neighboring tribes, ordering his soldiers to torch enemy villages and take captives to
sell to European slave traders. The story centers on Ossei, a strong-willed young man
who sets out to rescue his mother when their village is raided. This Ivoirian film offers a
compelling look at a rarely acknowledged aspect of the history of slavery: the active
role of black Africans in supplying human cargo for the Atlantic slave
trade.
© New Yorker Films
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Director: Richard Eyre, 2004
After years of Puritan stringency, England's theatres reopen and Charles II rescinds the
law allowing only male actors on public stages. This film centers on Ned Kynaston, an
actor who has made a living playing female roles, and Maria, his dresser and herself an
aspiring actress. An entertaining and well-acted story about the politics of Restoration
theatre. King Charles, the Earl of Clarendon, Nell Gwynn, and Samuel Pepys all make
appearances. Based loosely on events narrated in Pepys' diary. © Lions Gate
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Director: Lawrence Dunmore, 2005
This is the story of John Wilmot, the 2nd Earl of Rochester, a 17th-century English poet
who famously drank and debauched his way to an early grave but managed to earn posthumous
critical acclaim for his literary accomplishments. An interesting glimpse into the pomp and decadence of
Restoration high society as well as the literary genius and rakish wit of Wilmot. Based
on the play by Stephen Jeffreys. © Miramax
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