The Lion in Winter (1968)

  • Year: 1968
  • Released: 30 Oct 1968
  • Country: United Kingdom, United States
  • Adwords: Won 3 Oscars. 15 wins & 18 nominations total
  • IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0063227/
  • Rotten Tomatoes: https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/the_lion_in_winter
  • Available in: 720p, 1080p,
  • Language: English, French, Latin
  • MPA Rating: PG
  • Genre: Biography, Drama, History
  • Runtime: 134 min
  • Writer: James Goldman
  • Director: Anthony Harvey
  • Cast: Peter O’Toole, Katharine Hepburn, Anthony Hopkins
  • Keywords: christmas, based on play or musical, infidelity, england, france,
7.9/10

The Lion in Winter Storyline

1183. Fifty year old King Henry II of England is holding Christmas court in dealing with the issue of who will succeed him on the throne after his ultimate death, he outwardly wanting England to be left in the best hands possible. Arguably the person he has summoned who is the most important in this court is his estranged wife Eleanor of Aquitaine, who he had imprisoned ten years ago in her attempts to overthrow him. While love was questionably never in the picture between husband and wife, there is a fine line in their emotions toward the other of hate and admiration in their sheer tenacity to come out on top. While Henry favors youngest son, now sixteen year old privileged John, to ascend to the throne, Eleanor, who admittedly does not like any of her children, favors oldest surviving son (following the death of Henry “Jr.”) Richard, the determined one to who she had signed temporary stewardship of Aquitaine in her imprisonment. Her choice is largely because he is the least favored by Henry in being the one tied to Eleanor’s apron strings in childhood. Lost in the fray is middle son Geoffrey, the scheming one who, like his two brothers, wants to be king one day, sooner than later. Each, behind the scenes, plots to achieve his/her end goals at any cost, especially the downfall of the others in the picture. Thrown into the mix is seventeen year old King Philip II of France, who ascended to the throne following the death of his father, King Louis VII. Outwardly, Philip solely wants Henry to honor the agreement made with Louis for Louis’ daughter Alais to become Queen of England – by marrying whoever Henry’s heir – or return the sizable dowry that came with that agreement. Philip is well aware that Alais is Henry’s latest in a long line of mistresses – Eleanor who throws the most beloved but long deceased mistress Rosamund in Henry’s face more often than not – and thus a pawn in the negotiations, she who does not want to leave Henry to marry any of his sons. While he does not really care what happens to Alais, Philip has the end goal of wanting control of both France and England.

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The Lion in Winter Movie Reviews

One King’s Family: 1183

It is very rare to find an actor who has played the same historical figure twice. Charleton Heston was Andrew Jackson in THE PRESIDENT’S LADY and THE BUCCANNEER (1958). Edward Arnold was Diamond Jim Brady in DIAMOND JIM and LILIAN RUSSELL. Reginald Owen was Louis XV in VOLTAIRE and MONSIEUR BEAUCAIRE. Raymond Massey was John Brown in SANTA FE TRAIL and SEVEN ANGRY MEN. But only Peter O’Toole played the same historical figure in two major productions that were made only four years apart, and that showed the character seriously aging.

O’Toole had played King Henry II of England in BECKET (1964) as a young, vibrant monarch who makes the serious mistake of appointing his best friend to the one post that will make them enemies. The period that BECKET encompasses was roughly 1165 to 1171 (when Henry allowed himself to be whipped for the murder of Becket the year before – apparently at his orders). In THE LION IN WINTER (1968) he was King Henry some twelve years later. Henry is now the most powerful monarch in Western Europe, but he has problems of dynastic and political natures.

His power structure in 1183 is dependent on his hold of the marriage dower of his wife Eleanor of Aquitaine. In BECKET, Pamela Brown played Eleanor as a sharp tongued and jealous woman who arranged the murder of her rival Gwendolen (Sian Phillips), on the night Henry was going to have sex with her. Henry (who hates the sight of blood) has a nervous collapse upon seeing the results of Eleanor’s activities. In THE LION IN WINTER Eleanor was played by Katherine Hepburn. Now older, she is still a match in terms of political abilities to her husband. He has let her out of her castle prison to visit him and their three surviving sons (Richard, Geoffrey, and John) as well as Princess Alais of France and her brother King Phiip Augustus of France.

Henry’s family get-together is not for holiday reasons (although it is occurring at Christmas). He has taken a dower from King Philip’s father King Louis for Pincess Alais (Jane Merrow) to marry his oldest son Richard (Anthony Hopkins). But Alais has become the mistress of the monarch, who is considering divorcing Eleanor and starting a “proper” family with his second wife Alais. Richard and his two brothers (John Castle and Nigel Terry) are not happy with this prospect – nor with dynastic ambitions of each other. Of the three sons, Henry favors John (Terry) over Richard, although Richard is the better fighter. The reason is that Richard is the favorite of his mother, and has been implicated in some of her attempts to stir up civil war against Henry. Geoffrey (Castle) has brains but he is untrustworthy and finds that he is constantly dismissed by both parents. And King Philip (Timothy Dalton) is furious that due to the highhanded actions of Henry his father was reduced in power in Europe, and he is forced to report to a man who is technically his vassal due to the French lands that Henry controls.

THE LION IN WINTER had been a Broadway success in the middle 1960s, starring Robert Preston as Henry. The film is a successful transition, with the elderly monarch and his elderly consort tearing at each other in a kind of medieval WHO’S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF. O’Toole is wonderful as the still intelligent, vigorous, and bullying monarch he was in BECKET, except now he is facing his own mortality. Hepburn (who won her third Oscar for this film – one year after winning her second for GUESS WHO’S COMING TO DINNER and tying this time with Barbara Streisand for FUNNY GIRL) is able to display a woman capable of any political damage be it encouraging her sons to revolt or threatening future harm to Alais and any child she and Henry may have to torturing Henry with the suggestion that she (Eleanor) slept with Henry’s father before they met.

Hopkins’ hapless Richard is the most sympathetic of the three sons, with his humiliation when Philip maliciously reveals that Richard is a homosexual (the first time this trait was revealed in any film about Richard the Lion Hearted). Terry’s John is properly “pimple faced” and immature on the surface, but showing when he betrays his father that two-faced ability that would lead to his disasters as King. Castle is properly sinister throughout – one realizes that both parents will not suggest him as heir because he’d kill them as soon as he could safely plan it out afterward. Dalton’s Philip is galling to O’Toole, as he keeps showing that unlike his father he knows how to harm the British monarchy – by disgracing it’s leading hero (Richard), and by simply waiting for time to take it’s toll on his enemy Henry. And Merrow is the most sympathetic figure in the film, genuinely loving Henry but finding even he regards her as a dynastic pawn in the end. The movie was that rarity, a sequel as thoughtful and intelligent as the first film had been, and filling in the results of that first film’s background and story very well indeed.

like watching an episode of “Mama’s Family”

This movie is very well made and the acting is excellent. It concerns the lives of Henry II, his strong-willed wife (Eleanor) and their three surviving overly-ambitious sons.

The problem I have with this well-respected film is that although it is a relatively faithful to true life account of this family, the level of dysfunction is so high it just turned me off completely. It was sort of like watching an episode of Mama’s Family or maybe even Jerry Springer. Many people will forgive this or even be attracted to this, but I felt like turning the movie off again and again. Watching people savage each other just isn’t my cup of tea. In fact, EVERY member of this family was about as unlikable as they could possibly be and I wanted all of them to just go away! FYI–Think of how it must have been to have been English in the 12th and 13th centuries and have to put up with them! Henry II–one of the most ambitious and amoral kings ever, Richard the Lionhearted who loved fighting and massacring in the Crusades but could care less about ruling, and John I who was so disliked and miscalculated so badly during his reign (with the barons and the Pope) that no other English king has been named “John” since!

Extremely well done…but also rather awful. I can respect the fine acting and lovely sets…but that just isn’t enough for me.

Superb film and one of the best films of 1968

I didn’t see this film until fairly recently, and I am so glad I did, because The Lion in Winter is absolutely superb not only as an adaptation of James Goldman’s play about Henry II and Eleanor of Aquataine but as a film. I also firmly believe, and this is my opinion, that it is the second best film of 1968 after 2001. It has everything, wonderful performances, superb dialogue, an intriguing story, a beautiful score and adept direction, in short what more can you ask for?

The story of The Lion in Winter is a great one to work from, and one that works wonderfully. It is set mostly in the austere castle ramparts over the Christmas festival, yet it is also a story of a family squabble that has geopolitical import, in other words the Medieval Dymnastic War. The sets, scenery and costumes are exquisite, and John Barry’s score is breathtakingly beautiful and suitably melancholic. The direction is excellent, and while the film is over 2 hours it never feels as though it’s dragging.

In fact thanks to primarily the script and performances it is utterly riveting. The dialogue, what can I say? Can I coin the phrase “among the best ever written”? The dialogue is so good, and sparkles constantly, not to mention memorable and incredibly thought-provoking. The performances especially from the two leads are brilliant. Katherine Hepburn is a revelation as the skillful and consummate Eleanor, while a deliciously robust Peter O’Toole gives one of his best performances as Henry II. Everyone else is excellent too, and I have to say for me The Lion in Winter is also notable for the debuts of Timothy Dalton and Anthony Hopkins, both of them great debuts too.

Overall, superb and actually very difficult to fault. 10/10 Bethany Cox