Between Barack Obama and King Arthur, it's clear that Devon Terrell doesn't mind taking on roles that come with a lot of expectations. After his breakout role in the 2016 Obama biopic Barry, Terrell is poised to reach bigger audiences than ever in Netflix's new fantasy drama Cursed. A retelling of Arthurian Legend based on Frank Miller and Tom Wheeler's comic of the same name, the series puts the mythic figure of Nimue (Katherine Langford), aka the Lady of the Lake, at the center of the story long before the sword in the stone or the …
King Arthur: Legend of the Sword was a Guy Ritchie-directed take on the classic Medieval legend, starring Charlie Hunnam as the title character, Jude Law as the villainous Vortigern, Djimon Hounsou as Sir Bedivere, and Àstrid Bergès-Frisbey as the Mage who works for the legendary wizard Merlin. It was released in 2017 by Warner Bros., earning negative reviews and landing with a thud at the box office, effectively halting any future installments in the rebooted Arthurian legend. That's the whole story, right? Not even close. In an exclusive interview with our own Steve Weintraub for his …
Dev Patel plays King Arthur's nephew, Sir Gawain, in the trailer for David Lowery's medieval fantasy adventure retelling, The Green Knight.
Guy Ritchie's King Arthur: Legend Of The Sword was the first part of a planned cinematic universe, and here's where the fantasy epic was filmed.
Things did not go the way he wanted when making that movie.
Charlie Hunnam says one key bit of miscasting hurt King Arthur: Legend of the Sword, preventing the action movie from spawning a franchise.
As a historical figure, there have been hundreds of different iterations of King Arthur & his adventures. Here are some best & worst movies about him.
King Arthur: Legend of the Sword was Astrid Bergès-Frisbey’s most recent role but here’s where else you recognize the French-Spanish actress from.
Arguably the smartest thing about Joe Cornish’s delightful new movie The Kid Who Would Be King is that while others have simply tried straight remakes of the familiar legend of King Arthur and his Knights of the Round Table, Cornish’s film opens the tale up, repurposes it for the present day and modern conflict, and in doing so crafts a story that’s thoughtful, funny, cute, and charming for both kids and adults. Rather than lean on the narrative of a “Chosen One” who is special because of his birth or station, The Kid Who Would Be King …