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Tristan & Isolde

Tristan & Isolde

  • Status: Released
  • 07-04-2006
  • Runtime: 125 min
  • Score: 6.7
  • Vote count: 802

An affair between the second in line to Britain's throne and the princess of the feuding Irish spells doom for the young lovers.

James Franco

Tristan

Sophia Myles

Isolde

Rufus Sewell

Marke

David O'Hara

Donnchadh

Mark Strong

Wictred

Henry Cavill

Melot

Bronagh Gallagher

Bragnae

Ronan Vibert

Bodkin

Lucy Russell

Edyth

JB Blanc

Leon

Graham Mullins

Morholt

Leo Gregory

Simon

Dexter Fletcher

Orick

Richard Dillane

Aragon

Hans Martin Stier

Kurseval

Thomas Morris

Kaye

Jamie Thomas King

Anwick

Wolfgang Müller

Rothgar

Cheyenne Rushing

Lady Serafine

Barbora Kodetová

Lady Marke

Isobel Moynihan

Young Isolde

Thomas Brodie-Sangster

Young Tristan

Gordon Truefitt

Tournament Judge

Myles Taylor

Young Melot

Jack Montgomery

Young Simon

Marek Vašut

Luther

David Fisher

Irish Soldier

Bronwen Davies

Lady Aragon

Philip O'Sullivan

Paddreggh

Nevan Finegan

Tournament Crier

Jón Ólafsson

Coronation Priest

Todd Kramer

Widseth

Winter Ave Zoli

Widseth's Sister

Miroslav Šimůnek

Pict Guard

Kevin Flood

Funeral Priest

Wuchak

**_One of the Best Medieval/British Isle flicks_** Remember the three such movies of 1995: "Braveheart," "Rob Roy" and "First Knight"? "Tristan + Isolde" is better than all of them or, at least, on par. It shares plot elements of "First Knight" with the king's trusted protégé playing around with his young wife, but "Tristan + Isolde" is just overall superior. James Franco plays the brooding Tristan, who has good reason to be sullen, except when he escapes into Isolde's arms in secret. Sophia Myles works well as the Irish princess, Isolde, who's given as a gift to the king of the Brits, Marke (Rufus Sewell). Also on hand is Marke's nephew, Melot (Henry Cavill), who's passed up by the king for Tristan; David O'Hara as the wicked Irish king, Donnchadh; and the ignoble Wictred (Mark Strong). These are all strong, memorable characters. Although there are some contrived plot elements, the story (based on the medieval romantic legend) is coherent and pretty compelling. Meanwhile the locations (Ireland) and cinematography are breathtaking. The score's good too. Yet this isn't just a film that's beautiful in appearance & sound, it's beautiful period, despite the brutal violence, bloodshed and betrayal. The general ambiance is similar to, say, "The Last of the Mohicans" (1992) and lacks the crude elements of "Rob Roy." Some complain that James Franco is too selfishly sullen as Tristan, but that's a big part of the story. Should he have played Tristan as elated that the one & only woman he's ever loved has become the king's wife, a gift from Ireland? The whole adulterous tangled web could have probably been avoided if either Tristan or Isolde simply told the truth about their relationship BEFORE Isolde married the king, but it's not always easy to do this, especially when you're so young and dumb. By "dumb" I don't mean stupid, but rather naive and lacking the life-skills that only come with age & experience. There's also a lot of good stuff to glean from the tragedy: Everyone wants someone to believe in them; never trust a proven scoundrel; humble confession, remorse & repentance; the natural desire for freedom and "true love," etc. Despite its early 2006 release date, it was shot over two years earlier in September-October, 2003. It runs 2 hours, 5 minutes, and was shot in west-central Ireland at Connemara, County Galway. Exterior shots were done in the Czech Republic at Pruhonice Park and Castle, Krivoklat and Prague. GRADE: A