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Excalibur
CRITICS OF "Excalibur"
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Film4
Resource

November 06, 2013

Perhaps the best-ever filmed version of the Arthurian legend.
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TV Guide
Resource

November 06, 2013

Excessive but occasionally inspired, Excalibur gives us grimy lumbering knights, gloomy castles, slithering dragons, mesmerizing magic, and (of course) the struggle between good and evil.
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Variety
Resource

October 08, 2008

Exquisite, a near-perfect blend of action, romance, fantasy and philosophy, finely acted and beautifully filmed by director John Boorman and cinematographer Alex Thomson.
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Three Movie Buffs
Resource

April 28, 2013

Remains the definitive big screen telling of the Arthurian legend.
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Time Out
Resource

January 26, 2006

For all its audacity, a misguided folly.
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Sky Movies
Resource

November 06, 2013

The result is almost always the handsomest of films to behold. Storywise it has its moments, too, although it never quite achieves the difficult blend of grandeur and madness for which it strives.
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TIME Magazine
Resource

November 06, 2013

Give Boorman credit for the loopy grandeur of his imagery and imaginings, for the sweet smell of excess, for his heroic gamble that a movie can dare to trip over its pretensions -- and still fly.
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People Magazine

November 06, 2013

Despite moments of high style and wit, [Excalibur] too often substitutes mayhem for magic.
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Chicago Sun-Times
Resource

October 23, 2004

What a wondrous vision Excalibur is! And what a mess.
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Radio Times
Resource

November 06, 2013

The search for the Holy Grail and the final battle are simply stunning sequences, and, while the dizzying pace leaves scant time for proper characterisation, Nicol Williamson, Nigel Terry and Helen Mirren make their mark.
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Chicago Reader
Resource

November 06, 2013

There is humor here (in the form of a vaudeville Merlin, played by Nicol Williamson) as well as a diminution of scale that seems intended to help audiences through the thornier byways of Boorman's vision.
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New York Times
Resource

August 30, 2004

Mr. Boorman takes these myths very seriously, but he has used them with a pretentiousness that obscures his vision.
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