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To Kill a King

To Kill a King

  • Status: Released
  • 16-05-2003
  • Runtime: 102 min
  • Score: 5.7
  • Vote count: 64

A recounting of the relationship between General Fairfax and Oliver Cromwell, as they try to cope with the consequences of deposing King Charles I.

Tim Roth

Oliver Cromwell

Dougray Scott

Thomas Fairfax

Olivia Williams

Lady Anne Fairfax

James Bolam

Denzil Holles

Corin Redgrave

Lord de Vere

Finbar Lynch

Cousin Henry

Julian Rhind-Tutt

James

Adrian Scarborough

Sergeant Joyce

Jeremy Swift

The Earl of Whitby

Rupert Everett

King Charles I

Steven Webb

Boy at Naseby

Jake Nightingale

Captain Pride

Leonard Woodcock

Young Royalist Prisoner

Thomas Arnold

Messenger at Naseby

Sam Spruell

King's Guard

Julian Rivett

Little

Richard Bremmer

Abraham

Melissa Knatchbull

Lady Margaret Holles

Patricia Kerrigan

Mrs Cromwell

John-Paul Macleod

Richard Cromwell

Jonathan Coy

Digby

Mary Roscoe

Lady Whitby

Liam McKenna

Guard at Safe House

Louise Breckon-Richards

Tom's Maid

Oliver Fox

The Earl of York

Neil Howman

Doubter

Benedict Cumberbatch

Royalist

Iain Rogerson

Man at Execution

Andrew Cryer

Whitehall Messenger

Robert Sterne

Whitehall Guard

James Puddephatt

Merchant

Arthur Cox

Westminster Abbey Priest

Bruno Lastra

Spanish Ambassador

Ella Barker

Molly Fairfax

John Chard

I was counting on you. You let me down. To Kill a King is directed by Mike Barker and written by Jenny Mayhew. It stars Tim Roth, Dougray Scott, Olivia Williams, James Bolam and Rupert Everett. Music is by Richard G Mitchell and cinematography by Eigil Bryld. It’s the end of the English Civil War and with King Charles 1st (Everett) held prisoner by the Parliamentarians, Sir Thomas Fairfax (Scott) and Oliver Cromwell (Roth), friends and colleagues, fall out over the best plan of action for the New England. A severely troubled production and budgetary constraints left To Kill a King with a mountain to climb just to get acknowledged as a historical epic of worth. Add in the dubious take on this part of English history that so irked the historians, and you would be forgiven for thinking that the film is something of a stinker. Not so actually. For although it’s clearly far from flawless, it’s a literary piece of work that chooses character dynamics over blood and thunder. Suffice to say that those searching for a battle strewn epic should look elsewhere, but if you have a bent for observations on key personalities involved in war politics during times of upheaval in a period setting? Then this delivers the goods. Well performed by the principal players as well. 7/10