A Knight's Tale movie review & film summary (2001) | Roger Ebert (2024)

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A Knight's Tale movie review & film summary (2001) | Roger Ebert (1)

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It is possible, I suppose, to object when the audience at a 15th century jousting match begins to sing Queen's "We Will Rock You" and follows it with the wave. I laughed. I smiled, in fact, all through Brian Helgeland's "A Knight's Tale," which tells the story of a low-born serf who impersonates a knight, becomes a jousting champion and dares to court the daughter of a nobleman.

Some will say the movie breaks tradition by telling a medieval story with a soundtrack of classic rock. They might as well argue it breaks the rules by setting a 1970s rock opera in the Middle Ages. To them I advise: Who cares? A few days after seeing this movie, I saw Baz Luhrmann's "Moulin Rouge," which was selected to open the Cannes Film Festival despite being set in 1900 and beginning with the hero singing "The Sound of Music." In the case of "A Knight's Tale," Helgeland has pointed out that an orchestral score would be equally anachronistic, since orchestras hadn't been invented in the 1400s. For that matter, neither had movies.

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The film stars Heath Ledger, said to be the next big thing on the Australian sex symbol front, as William, a servant to a knight. The knight is killed, and his servants will be eating parboiled hedgehogs unless someone comes up with an idea. Along happens a desperate and naked man who makes them an offer: "Clothe, feed and shoe me, and I'll give you your patents!" Brewer's Dictionary teaches us that Letters Patent are documents signed by a sovereign, conferring such rights as a title of nobility. The man offering to forge them introduces himself as Chaucer (Paul Bettany), and indeed "A Knight's Tale" is a very, very, very free adaptation of one of his Canterbury Tales .

With the forged patents and the dead knight's suit of armor to disguise him, William and his sidekicks Roland and Wat (Mark Addy and Alan Tudyk) put themselves through one of those standard movie training montages and are soon ready to enter a joust, which is the medieval version of golf, with your opponent as the ball. There are many fearsome jousting matches in the movie, all of them playing with perspective and camera angles so that the horses and their riders seem to thunder at high speed for 30 seconds down a course that would take about five, until one knight or the other unseats his opponent three times and takes the victory.

This is not handled with great seriousness but in the spirit of high fun, and there is the evil Count Adhemar (Rufus Sewell) as an opponent. Since the knights wear armor guarding their faces, it might seem hard to distinguish them, but since time immemorial the movies have solved this dilemma by giving good knights attractive facial armor, and bad knights ugly little asymmetrical slits to peer through. I imagine a bad knight going into the armor store and saying, "I want the ugliest facial mask in the place!" Darth Vader is the only villain in the movies with a cool face plate.

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Anyway, there are lots of babes in jousting land, especially the lady Jocelyn (Shannyn Sossamon), whose father is the ruler (at a banquet after the first tournament, she dances with William as David Bowie sings "Golden Years"). There is also a cute blacksmithess named Kate (Laura Fraser), who must be good, as she has obviously not been kicked in the head much.

The movie is centered on a series of jousting matches, alternating with threats to unveil the secret of William's identity. Finally we arrive at the World Championships in London, alas without the movie supplying a definition of what in these pre-Columbian times is considered "the world." My guess is that the World Championship of Jousting is to England as the World Series is to North America. Another thing they have in common: Both events feature "The Boys Are Back in Town."

The movie has an innocence and charm that grow on you. It's a reminder of the days before films got so cynical and unrelentingly violent. "A Knight's Tale" is whimsical, silly and romantic, and seeing it after "The Mummy Returns" is like taking Tums after eating the Mummy.

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Film Credits

A Knight's Tale movie review & film summary (2001) | Roger Ebert (9)

A Knight's Tale (2001)

Rated PG-13For Action Violence, Some Nudity and Brief Sex-Related Dialogue

132 minutes

Cast

Paul Bettanyas Chaucer

Heath Ledgeras William

Rufus Sewellas Count Adhemar

Shannyn Sossamonas Jocelyn

Laura Fraseras Kate

Written and Directed by

  • Brian Helgeland

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A Knight's Tale movie review & film summary (2001) | Roger Ebert (2024)

FAQs

What is the movie A knight's Tale about? ›

What was the last movie reviewed by Ebert? ›

The last review Ebert wrote was for To the Wonder, which he gave 3.5 out of 4 stars in a review for the Chicago Sun-Times. It was posthumously published on April 6, 2013. In July 2013, a previously unpublished review of Computer Chess appeared on Ebert's website.

Why is a knights tale so good? ›

This film has everything - action, adventure, comedy, romance and rock songs. It's feel good entertainment and Helgeland's unique approach still feels fresh, sassy and on point. Ledger is surrounded by a good supporting cast of Paul Bettany, Rufus Sewell, Mark Addy, Shannyn Sossamon and James Purefoy.

What happens at the end of a knight's tale? ›

At the end of A Knight's Tale, William defeats the villainous Count Adhemar, kisses Jocelyn, and then shares his prize winnings with the group in celebration.

What are the inappropriate scenes in a knight's tale? ›

Sex, Romance & Nudity

A male character who joins the protagonist's entourage is completely naked as he walks through a field (buttocks shown). Some innuendo: talk of female breasts and of "uncross(ing) her legs."

What crime did the knight commit in her tale? ›

Summary: In the Wife of Bath's tale, the Knight has raped a young maiden. His punishment for doing so is death; he is to have his head cut off. However, the King agrees to hand him over to the Queen.

What were Roger Ebert's final words? ›

Sometime ago, I heard that Roger Ebert's wife, Chaz, talked about Roger's last words. He died of cancer in 2013. “Life is but a tale, told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.

How old was Roger Ebert when he died? ›

Death. On April 4, 2013, Ebert died of cancer at age 70 at the Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago according to the Chicago Sun-Times. His wife Chaz said that "We were getting ready to go home today for hospice care, when he [Ebert] looked at us, smiled, and passed away." He battled cancer for 11 years.

Were Siskel and Ebert friends? ›

The two slowly developed a friendship and even a sort of love for each other over several decades, but the one-upmanship between them always remained. Siskel, a habitual gambler and Playboy Mansion regular would sabotage Ebert's interviews in order to steal his scoops whenever possible.

How historically accurate is A knight's tale? ›

The rating of the film in regards to entertainment is a 5/5 but ⅗ for historical accuracy. The film was engaging and enjoyable but, while it brought a comedic feel, the accuracy of the film lacked authenticity to the time period when it came to original outfits as well as some other details along the way.

Who was the bad guy in a knight's tale? ›

Count Adhemar is the main antagonist of the 2001 medieval action movie A Knight's Tale. He is a cruel, arrogant aristocrat who serves as protagonist William Thatcher's main rival in a series of jousting tournaments, and for the affections of a noblewoman named Jocelyn.

Who is the female lead in a knight's tale? ›

Sossamon beat Kate Hudson for the lead female role in Brian Helgeland's adventure dramedy A Knight's Tale, opposite Heath Ledger.

What is the irony in the knight's tale? ›

"The Knight's Tale" features dramatic irony as all three members of the love triangle pray for a different outcome to the tournament, yet by a twist of fate, all three actually get exactly what they prayed for. Dramatic irony is a situation in which the audience knows something the characters do not.

What is the conclusion of the Knight's Tale? ›

Arcite dies and Theseus arranges a great funeral for him. After a long period of mourning, Palamon and Emilie are married and live out their lives in "a love unbroken." Part I: The Knight's Tale perfectly fits the Knight himself: That is, he chooses a story filled with knights, love, honor, chivalry, and adventure.

What is the tragic ending of the Knights tale? ›

Even though Arcite and Palamon had become mortal foes, in his moment of death, Arcite allows the old chivalric bonds of brotherhood to triumph, declaring that if he cannot live, Palamon ought to marry Emilye. Emelye, Palamon, and Theseus weep and wail inconsolably as all Athens mourns Arcite's death.

How historically accurate is a knight's tale? ›

The rating of the film in regards to entertainment is a 5/5 but ⅗ for historical accuracy. The film was engaging and enjoyable but, while it brought a comedic feel, the accuracy of the film lacked authenticity to the time period when it came to original outfits as well as some other details along the way.

What does "I will fong you" mean? ›

'Fong' is an actual word from old English, which directly translated means: 'to kick'. So when Wat says "I'll fong you" he is actually saying, "I'll kick you."

How did William become a knight in A Knight's Tale? ›

When the old knight dies right before a tournament, William puts the armor on and fills in. He wins the joust and vows to become a knight even though he is forbidden to do so by law (only a man of noble birth can become a knight.)

What is ironic about the Knight's tale? ›

"The Knight's Tale" features dramatic irony as all three members of the love triangle pray for a different outcome to the tournament, yet by a twist of fate, all three actually get exactly what they prayed for. Dramatic irony is a situation in which the audience knows something the characters do not.

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