Blu-ray - Director's Cut / Wide Screen Learn more
Enter a zip code
| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| DVD - Wide Screen | $19.99 |
| DVD - Director's Cut / Wide Screen | $31.49 |
| DVD - Pan & Scan | $19.99 |
1080p HD resolution provides dazzling, unparalleled picture quality; Loseless audio delivers the purest digital sound available; Smart menu technology floats on-screen during playback so you never leave the film
Full Product DetailsDisc #1 -- Kingdom of Heaven
1. Crossroads
2. Crusaders
3. Without an Heir
4. Sin
5. Old Memories
6. The Baron's Son
7. In Hell
8. To Erase My Sins
9. The Guard of the Hawk
10. Whoever Dies Here Today
11. The Path to Heaven
12. A Better World
13. Remember That Name
14. The Knight's Oath
15. Perilous Journey
16. The Saracen's Challenge
17. Jerusalem
18. The New Baron
19. Sibylla
20. The Marshall of Jerusalem
21. His Father's Son
22. At the King's Table
23. The Leper King
24. Ibelin
25. Guests of the House
26. There Is Only Light
27. God Wills It
28. Tokens
29. Blasphemy
30. Defenders of Kerak
31. The Friendly Enemy
32. Jerusalem Has Come
33. The Kiss of Peace
34. I Quake for Islam
35. Power
3. An Understanding
37. Conscience or Nothing
38. The Final Dream
39. Long Live the King
40. The Reckoning
41. A Mother's Pain
42. Templars' Attack
43. Queen of Jerusalem
44. Beloved Sister
45. He Is Waiting
46. The Road to Hattin
47. A King's Example
48. Four Days
49. To Defend Jerusalem
50. Rise a Knight
51. Siege
52. Retaliation
53. The Third Day
54. God Will Understand
55. The Door Into Jerusalem
56. Final Stand
57. Nothing and Everything
58. The Perfect Knight
59. Leaving Jerusalem
60. A Queen Never Walks
61. I Am the Blacksmith
62. Epilogue/End Titles
Director Ridley Scott (Gladiator) has really outdone himself with this spellbinding film, an elaborately mounted epic that takes occasional liberties with the historical record but recreates the period so evocatively that viewers will be held in thrall to its sweeping narrative. The movie opens in the 12th century, between the Second and Third Crusades, with Jerusalem in Christian hands and the Leper King, Baldwin (Edward Norton), maintaining an uneasy peace with the Muslim warrior prince Saladin (Ghassan Massoud). With a truce in place, Sir Godfrey of Ibelin (Liam Neeson) returns to France in hopes of persuading his illegitimate son, Balian (Orlando Bloom), to join him in the Holy Land and defend Baldwin’s “kingdom of heaven.” Unbeknownst to either of them, unscrupulous, plundering Templar knights are undermining the peace -- inflaming the Muslim hordes and risking Jerusalem’s safety. Scott exhibits remarkable skill in telling the larger story and depicting historical events while maintaining an emphasis on more intimate, character-driven aspects of the story, such as Baldwin’s tender relationship with his sister, Sibylla (Eva Green), and adviser, Tiberias (Jeremy Irons), as well as Sibylla’s on-and-off romance with Balian. Scott lays blame for the siege of Jerusalem plainly and unambiguously at the feet of the villainous knights, and he goes to considerable lengths to make Saladin the chivalrous warrior of legend, but the film isn’t a cut-and-dried exercise in political correctness. The Europeans aren’t all bad, nor the Arab Muslims all good. In fact, the director is to be commended for approaching this very complex phase of history in a reasonably evenhanded way. Were this not the case, however, it wouldn’t change the fact that Kingdom of Heaven is extraordinarily entertaining. Everything about it is first-rate, with Scott’s realistic, expansively staged battle sequences meriting special commendation. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
More reviews and recommendations