Becket (1964) [Re-Up]

Posted By: Efgrapha

Becket (1964)
DVD9 | VIDEO_TS | NTSC, 16:9 (720x480) VBR | 02:28:10 | 7.69 Gb
Audio: English AC3 5.1 @ 448 Kbps/2.0 @ 192 Kbps; French AC3 2.0 @ 192 Kbps;
Spanish AC3 2.0 @ 192 Kbps | Subs: English
Genre: Biography, Drama, Historical Epic

A high-class costume drama with a substantive historical basis, Becket is the true story of the friendship between King Henry II (Peter O'Toole) and Thomas à Becket (Richard Burton), a royal courtier and confidant whom Henry appoints as Archbishop of Canterbury. As Becket takes his duties with the Church seriously, he finds himself increasingly at odds with the King, who finally orders the death of his once-close companion when he continues to defy the throne. Burton is very good and O'TOOLE is even better: both men were nominated for the Best Actor Oscar, while Edward Anhalt's screenplay, based on the stageplay by Jean Anouilh, won for Best Adapted Screenplay. The basic theme of separation of church and state still reverberates today, while the top-notch production values ensure Becket's place as one of Britain's better historical epics.

Synopsis by Don Kaye, Allmovie.com

How could you hope for better casting than Peter O'Toole and his acting rival/drinking buddy Richard Burton playing opposite each other as England's spoiled, willful King Henry II and his friend and eventual nemesis, Thomas Becket, archbishop of Canterbury?

The duo give electrifying life to "Becket," a tale of political and literal back-stabbing that plays like a high-toned mobster movie. Henry, a Norman ruler aiming to increase his control over the restless Saxon masses, appoints his native-born friend Becket as archbishop, expecting him to bring the troublesome church hierarchy under the king's command.

When Becket begins paying closer heed to divine authority than to his earthly monarch, Henry bawls, "Becket is the only intelligent man in my kingdom, and he's against me!" The rift spurs a power struggle that climaxes with Becket's martyrdom.

The film earned both O'Toole and Burton best actor Oscar nominations when it was released in 1964, and John Gielgud got a best supporting actor nod as sly King Louis VII of France. Despite director Peter Glenville's rather static staging, their performances still crackle.

Burton has the more subdued, internal part, calculating just how far he can go opposing his old friend before provoking Henry's wrath once too often. O'Toole, arrogance incarnate, projects to the rafters, shouting his lines so forcefully in one horseback scene that the startled animals flinch. It's a terrific performing duel, and the film implies that Henry's fury is half political outrage and half something like a betrayed lover's pique, a rather audacious subtext for a film of its time.

Review by Colin Covert, Star Tribune

IMDB 8,0/10 from 9 394 users
Wiki

Director: Peter Glenville

Writers: Edward Anhalt, Jean Anouilh

Cast: Richard Burton, Peter O'Toole, John Gielgud and other















Special Features:

- Audio Commentary with actor Peter O'Toole moderated by film critic Mark Kermode
- Interview with editor Anne V. Coats (7:13)
- Interview with composer Laurence Rosenthal (12:23)
- 1967 archival interview with Richard Burton (13:58)
- 1977 archival interview with Richard Burton (12:24)
- Still gallery (47 images)
- Theatrical trailer (4:49)
- TV spot (0:28)

All thanks to original releaser