Summary

  • King Arthur movies offer various interpretations of the legend, inspiring live-action, animated, and modern adaptations.
  • The portrayal of King Arthur can vary, with some movies focusing on his idealistic image as a medieval knight.
  • While some films may lack magic and excitement, others showcase the enduring impact and charm of the Camelot story.

The Arthurian legend is a popular choice among filmmakers historically, with some of the best King Arthur movies bringing the tale to the screen in exciting and new ways. A central figure in the legends making up a body of medieval literature and arcane texts known as the Matter of Britain, the King Arthur legend has since developed into a figure of international interest. King Arthur is a story cited as inspiring numerous live-action interpretations, as well as animated shorts, parodies, and modernizations of the famous Camelot story.

While other stories around this time regarding King Arthur all vary from text to text both in creativity and narrative, modern historians have decided that Arthur is a fictitious character designed to embody the ideal image of a forthright medieval knight. With other iconic characters populating the tale, from Merlin to Lancelot, the King Arthur movies have ranged in how they tackle the legend as well as the quality in which they do it. Some are short of magic and excitement while others are proof of why the story has such a lasting impact.

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Arthur & Merlin: Knights Of Camelot (2020)

King Arthur Goes Through A Crisis As Camelot Is Seiged

Arthur & Merlin

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Arthur & Merlin: Knights Of Camelot
Release Date
July 23, 2020
Runtime
90 Minutes
Director
Giles Alderson
  • Cast Placeholder Image
    Richard Short
    King Arthur
  • Cast Placeholder Image
    Tim Fellingham
    Sir Lancelot
  • Headshot Of Stella Stocker
    Stella Stocker
    Guinevere
  • Cast Placeholder Image
    Sanna Kelly
    The Hag

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Streaming

Arthur & Merlin: Knights Of Camelot is a fantasy film that follows King Arthur as he faces internal and external threats to his kingdom upon his return from Rome. Facing betrayal and the resurgence of dark powers, Arthur must reunite with his old ally Merlin to restore peace and reclaim his throne. The film, directed by Giles Alderson, stars Richard Short as Arthur and Richard Brake as Merlin.

Audiences looking to understand the legend of King Arthur should seek out any source material other than this dire attempt at a feature film. Arthur and Merlin: Knights of Camelot sees Arthur (Richard Short) and his men race home to prevent the evil Mordred from taking over Camelot castle, yet this classic story is somehow twisted beyond recognition in director Giles Anderson's hollow attempts at making a rugged and realistic period piece.

Knights of Camelot takes an interesting approach in telling a more stripped-down take on the story, focusing on a version of Arthur who has lost faith in the legend of himself. However, while it attempts to be a compelling character study of the man, it is hard to overlook how thin the story is and the low-budget nature of the movie makes it feel like an amateurish production.

Sword Of The Valiant: The Legend Of Sir Gawain And The Green Knight (1984)

A Young Knight Is Challenged By A Mystic Warrior

The Green Knight and Gawain posing back to back in animated poster for Sword of the Valiant: The Legend of Gawain and the Green Knight

The extensive nature of the Arthurian world allows for some tales of heroes beyond Arthur himself. Sword of the Valiant: The Legend of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight is a low-budget retelling of the classic 14th-century poem which stars Arthur's young knight Gawain (Miles O'Keeffe) accepting a challenge to fight a mysterious Green Knight, who proves to be a more mystical foe than he initially thought. Sean Connery stars as the Green Knight.

A strangely low budget, poor production values, and dreary fight sequences conspire to make Weeks' medieval epic feel more like B-movie fare than its stellar cast has any right to feature in. Sword of the Valiant's screeching synthesizer-led score adds an unpleasant aspect for the audience to put up with long before Gawain (Miles O'Keeffe) meets the Green Knight (Sean Connery) on the field of battle.

A Kid In King Arthur's Court (1995)

A Young Kid Is Transported Back In Time

A Kid In King Arthur's Court

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A Kid in King Arthur's Court
Release Date
August 11, 1995
Runtime
89 Minutes
Director
Michael Gottlieb
  • Headshot Of Thomas Ian Nicholas
    Thomas Ian Nicholas
    Calvin Fuller
  • Cast Placeholder Image
    Joss Ackland
    King Arthur
  • Cast Placeholder Image
    Art Malik
    Lord Belasco
  • Cast Placeholder Image
    Paloma Baeza
    Princess Katey

WHERE TO WATCH

Streaming

A Kid in King Arthur's Court follows a young boy named Calvin Fuller who is mysteriously transported from modern-day California to the legendary court of King Arthur. As Calvin acclimates to medieval life, he must use his contemporary knowledge and tools to help the King and his knights, ultimately discovering his own bravery and resourcefulness. The film features Thomas Ian Nicholas as Calvin and Joss Ackland as King Arthur.

Loosely based on Mark Twain's iconic 1889 novel A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court, A Kid in King Arthur's Court attempts to offer a kid-friendly Arthurian adventure with a time travel twist. This forgotten Walt Disney movie sees a young, baseball-obsessed boy named Calvin transported from contemporary Los Angeles to Camelot, where he helps King Arthur keep his throne using a CD player, a Swiss Army Knife, and roller skates.

The groan-inducing catchphrase "Joust Do It" is a prime example of the kind of lazy humor that can be expected from this Disney misfire that offers no real fun with the Arthurian legend and simply presents one tired fish-out-of-water gag after another. While nearly a total misfire from Disney, A Kid in King Arthur's Court is worth viewing if only to see performances from a young Kate Winslet and Daniel Craig, who both went on to become huge stars later on.

Shrek The Third (2007)

Shrek Tries To Convince A Young Arthur To Be King

Shrek the Third Film Poster

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Shrek the Third
Release Date
May 18, 2007
Runtime
93 minutes
Director
Chris Miller, Raman Hui

WHERE TO WATCH

Streaming

Shrek embarks on a new adventure when he is tasked with finding a suitable heir to the throne of Far Far Away. Reluctant to become king himself, Shrek sets out with Donkey and Puss in Boots to locate the rightful heir, a teenage boy named Arthur. Meanwhile, back in the kingdom, Fiona and her friends face a coup led by the vengeful Prince Charming.

The Shrek movie franchise has always had a lot of fun reworking fairy tales and fables into its family-friendly comedy stories, so it was only a matter of time before they got around to tackling the Arthurian legend. The movie finds Shrek inheriting the throne he has no interest in so he is forced to find Fiona's young, under-achieving cousin, Arthur (or Artie), to take his place.

At its core, Shrek the Third's concept is seemingly designed to be a film for adults that is instead shackled by its core demographic of a child-based audience, containing multiple jokes about existential ennui that undoubtedly fly straight over most of its viewer's heads. While the cast of Shrek the Third is still clearly having a good time voicing the characters that made Shrek and Shrek 2 such fantastic family movies, there is little about Shrek the Third's story to excite or enthrall fans.

The Last Legion (2007)

A Roman Soldier Heads To Britain To Gather ers

The Last Legion
The Last Legion
Release Date
April 19, 2007
Runtime
102 minutes
Director
Doug Lefler

Cast

WHERE TO WATCH

Streaming

As the Roman Empire collapses, the young Romulus Augustus leaves the city behind and embarks on a risky journey to Britain to find a legion of ers.

While many of the takes on King Arthur focus on the well-known legend rather than worry about historical accuracy, there are some that are interested in diving deeper into the real historical aspects that inspired the legend. Loosely inspired by the events of 5th-century European history, including the collapse of the Western Roman Empire, The Last Legion blends these historical events with fantastical elements from the legend of King Arthur to provide a fictional basis for the Arthurian legend.

To form the backbone of a gritty narrative, Doug Lefler's The Last Legion brings together a crop of fine English actors, including Colin Firth, Thomas Brodie-Sangster, Ben Kingsley, and Rupert Friend. The Last Legion is decent enough combat-based fare but it pales compared to other historical action films released around the same time period, including Troy and Antoine Fuqua's King Arthur.

Transformers: The Last Knight (2017)

The Transformers And The Arthurian Legend Mix For A New Adventure

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Transformers: The Last Knight
Release Date
June 21, 2017
Runtime
149 minutes
Director
Michael Bay

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Transformers: The Last Knight chronicles the war between humans and Transformers, with Optimus Prime missing. An unlikely alliance of Cade Yeager, Bumblebee, an English Lord, and an Oxford Professor must uncover hidden secrets of Earth's Transformer history to save the future.

Not content with the exciting concept of giant robots that can disguise themselves as various vehicles, the Transformers movies have also been keen on reshaping history by putting these robots at the center of some big events. After playing into the Moon landing and battling the Nazis in World War II, Transformers: The Last Knight links to King Arthur with them helping him and Merlin defeat the Saxons and tie their legend with his.

The fifth installment in the Transformers film series is not looking to think too hard about any of its narrative choices, instead delivering the epic battles and collision of worlds that Bay's Transformers titles have become known for. Transformers: The Last Knight's special effects essentially prop up an otherwise nonsensical movie, but the CG work is so clean in Bay's final Transformers offering that it masks the franchise's now-familiar shortcomings more palatable than some of its predecessors.

Tristan & Isolde (2006)

Two Young Royals On Opposites One A Dispute Form A Romance

Tristan & Isolde (2006)
Tristan & Isolde
Release Date
April 7, 2006
Runtime
125 minutes
Director
Kevin Reynolds

After England is attacked by Ireland, Marke is elected king to make peace. His son, presumed dead, is found by the Irish king's daughter and the two fall in love, unaware that Marke wants to seal the peace by marrying her.

Tristan and Isolde is another movie that puts one of the knights of the roundtable in the spotlight rather than Arthur himself. In the movie, Tristian is the second in line to take the throne only for his duty to his kingdom to become complicated when he falls in love with a princess of the Irish clan who is currently feuding with his family.

Tristan and Isolde is a serviceable attempt at a medieval romance wrapped up in Arthurian legend, although the Scott Free-produced film occasionally fails to elicit the levels of emotion needed to sustain its core love story. A young James Franco excels as Tristan here, playing the prince with a well-tempered blend of duty and ion, while his chemistry with co-star Sophia Myles is palpable even if it isn't the epic romance that was promised in the marketing.

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First Knight (1995)

An Older King Arthur Battles A Rogue Knight

First Knight

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First Knight
Release Date
July 7, 1995
Runtime
134 Minutes
Director
Jerry Zucker

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Lancelot falls in love with Guinevere, who will soon marry King Arthur. Meanwhile, a violent warlord tries to seize power from Arthur and his Knights of the Round Table.

While not a historical take on the story, First Knight is a more grounded approach to the story of King Arthur and some of the key characters in his world. Sean Connery plays the older King Arthur who is contending with an invading rogue knight while his younger wife Guinevere (Julia Ormond) begins a romantic affair with Lancelot, played by Richard Gere. The movie takes inspiration from French poet Chrétien de Troyes' take on the legend.

First Knight would benefit greatly from a little magic, or indeed humor, to elevate the otherwise strong performances from Connery and several of his co-stars. While Gere is perhaps a fatal miscasting as an uninspired Lancelot, the film is a gorgeous spectacle visually, with Adam Greenberg's cinematography transporting audiences to the rolling hills surrounding the fabled Camelot.

King Arthur: Legend Of The Sword (2017)

A Young Outlaw Discovers He Is The Heir To The Throne

King Arthur Legend of the Sword Movie Poster

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King Arthur: Legend of the Sword
Release Date
May 12, 2017
Runtime
2h 6m
Director
Guy Ritchie

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King Arthur: Legend of the Sword is a 2017 action-adventure movie directed by Guy Ritchie. After being robbed of his birthright, Arthur, played by Charlie Hunnam, is able to pull a sword from the stone and restart his journey toward his true legacy. Along the way, Arthur goes up against King Vortigern, who is played by Jude Law.

Director Guy Ritchie's take on the Arthurian legend is certainly bold, with Charlie Hunnam strutting around as the titular king in a manner more akin to earlier Guy Ritchie gangster movie fare such as Snatch. The movie finds Arthur unaware of his lineage to the thrown and playing the reluctant hero who begins the movie more interested in serving himself. He is ed by the likes of Jude Law, Djimon Honsou, and Eric Bana.

Ritchie cheekily also draws parallels to the Brexit issue dominating his home country at the time of the film's release. Yet despite the tongue-in-cheek fun posited by King Arthur: Legend of the Sword, its box office failure scuppered the other five sequel films in the pipeline, leaving Ritchie's franchise starter as a standalone film that is a highly enjoyable ride whose narrative never really goes anywhere.

A Knight In Camelot (1998)

A Computer Programmer Goes Back In Time

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A Knight In Camelot
Release Date
November 8, 1998
Runtime
90 minutes
Director
Roger Young
Writers
Joe Wiesenfeld
Producers
Nick Gillott
  • Cast Placeholder Image
    Michael York
    King Arthur
  • Cast Placeholder Image
    Whoopi Goldberg
    Dr. Vivien Morgan
  • Cast Placeholder Image
    Paloma Baeza
    Sandy
  • Cast Placeholder Image
    Simon Fenton
    Clarence

A Knight in Camelot is a 1998 film adaptation of Mark Twain's classic tale, featuring Whoopi Goldberg as a modern-day scientist who is transported back to the medieval era. Armed with her laptop, she navigates King Arthur's court, blending her contemporary knowledge with the customs of the past.

Another reimagining of Mark Twain's A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court, this made-for-TV movie proved to be a more successful comedy. The real star of A Knight In Camelot is leading lady Whoopi Goldberg, whose turn as scientist Vivien Morgan out of her time is both touching and hilarious as she saves King Arthur's (Michael York) bamboozled court from the nefarious Sir Sagramore (Robert Addie).

Disney was acutely aware of their failure with A Kid In King Arthur's Court in 1995, with the studio attempting a more mature-skewing remake just three years later as a result. This time, however, the production studio landed much closer to their usual standard of the movie, with A Knight In Camelot providing genuine laughs alongside a more robust, cohesive script and led by a genuine comedic star.