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| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| DVD - Wide Screen Superbit | $26.99 |
| DVD - Wide Screen | $14.99 |
| DVD - Wide Screen | $19.99 |
| Blu-ray - Wide Screen / Subtitled / Dubbed | $23.19 |
| UMD for Sony PSP - Wide Screen / Subtitled | $14.99 |
Closed Caption; Over 10 minutes of additonal footage; HBO making-of special; 11 behind-the scenes featurettes; Music video
Full Product DetailsDisc #1 -- A Knight's Tale
1. Start [:23]
2. Sir Ector Rides Again [5:55]
3. "Low Rider" [6:07]
4. Chaucer the Trudger [4:22]
5. Foxy Lady [5:58]
6. Master of 1000 Lances [3:35]
7. A Gambling Problem [2:02]
8. Sword on Foot [1:59]
9. "Takin' Care of Business" [1:49]
10. Kate the Smithee [1:43]
11. Count Adhemar [1:14]
12. Hark! The Herald Sings [3:13]
13. Ulrich Vs. Colville [3:17]
14. Adhemar Vs. Ulrich [5:27]
15. Dance Lessons [9:09]
16. "Golden Years" [1:49]
17. A Draw [3:12]
18. "My Dearest Jocelyn" [8:13]
19. "I Will Not Lose!" [5:09]
20. Proving His Love [6:52]
21. Ulrich's Prize [3:12]
22. 12 Years Earlier [:27]
23. Word of His Son [6:45]
24. Pride & the Passion [2:26]
25. Under Arrest [14:14]
26. Sir William [3:59]
27. "He's Tipped It!" [5:29]
28. Weighted, Measured & Wanting [1:35]
Erstwhile teen heartthrob Heath Ledger finally attains stardom as the charismatic leading man of A Knight's Tale, a breezy, briskly paced romp that chronicles the hilarious misadventures of an ersatz nobleman and his band of merry men. Ledger plays a lowly squire who assumes the identity of a recently deceased knight in hopes of competing in a lavish tournament. Mark Addy lends support as a skeptical fellow squire, while Shannyn Sossamon brightens the screen as a beautiful princess, and Rufus Sewell shows suave style as a cruel competitor. Paul Bettany steals many scenes in an absolutely first-rate turn as a garrulous, unknown writer by the name of Geoffrey Chaucer, who forges documents attesting to Ledger's nobility and thus embroils himself in the perilous scheme. Writer-director Brian Helgeland (Payback) employs a delightfully novel approach in the telling of this Tale by liberally sprinkling it with deliberate anachronisms: a tournament audience sings Queen's "We Will Rock You," for example, and the characters spice the King's English with 20th-century slang. Both Helgeland and Bettany discuss the rationale for this in their commentary for the DVD, which also includes an HBO "making of" documentary and a whopping 11 behind-the-scenes featurettes in addition to deleted scenes (introduced by Helgeland), production notes, music videos, web site links, and DVD-ROM content. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
More reviews and recommendations
Drinking
Some strong language
Mild sexual situation, brief non-sexual nudity
Lots of jousting and sword-fighting violence, not too graphic
Not an issue.
Not an issue.
About AKnight's Tale
Parents need to know that this movie is very violent, with a lot of shattered lances and battered combatants, but little gore. There is some strong language and a mild sexual situation.
Families can talk about the pros and cons of the use of anachronisms (Wat says, "It's a lance? hel--LO!") to tell this story, and about the loyalty shown by William, Jocelyn, Roland, Wat, and Geoffrey (and Coville) to each other. They should also talk about why Adhemar was willing to do anything to win and how he would have felt if he had been successful. Why does the Prince want to compete without letting anyone know who he is? Why was it important for William to allow Coville to lose with honor? And families should discuss Jocelyn's order to William that he lose to prove his love for her, and whether that was fair or kind. Take a look at Leigh Hunt's poem, "The Glove and the Lions" at for a similar story that concludes, "No love," quoth he, "but vanity sets love a task like that." They might want to take a look at a modernized version of "The Pardoner's Tale" to see if Geoffrey Chaucer kept his word and got his revenge.