An adaptation of Henry V. Anybody else watched this? 30 minutes in and it seems very well done.
Micah97 said:
I enjoyed it but I am a sucker for English history and movies about the monarchy. The battle Agincourt was fairly portrayed in the movie - as accurate as movies tend to be.
It's a slow build to the climax and the ending was a bit surprising. Well worth the two hour investment.
Agreed. They were very enjoyable. Both were not "must see " movies, but were very well done, and a great way to kill two hours.Champ Bailey said:Micah97 said:
I enjoyed it but I am a sucker for English history and movies about the monarchy. The battle Agincourt was fairly portrayed in the movie - as accurate as movies tend to be.
It's a slow build to the climax and the ending was a bit surprising. Well worth the two hour investment.
I've really enjoyed this and the other one Netflix came out with a year ago with Chris Pine, The Outlaw King.
Saint Pablo said:
Really enjoyed the movie! Well done. Robert Pattinson was hilarious
Micah97 said:
I enjoyed it but I am a sucker for English history and movies about the monarchy. The battle Agincourt was fairly portrayed in the movie - as accurate as movies tend to be.
It's a slow build to the climax and the ending was a bit surprising. Well worth the two hour investment.
Brian Earl Spilner said:
That was a great portrayal of the Battle of the Bast**ds. (That overhead shot of Falstaff was lifted STRAIGHT out of GoT.)
But seriously. That was an awesome battle scene and made the movie for me. Although I have to say the performances kept me engaged pretty much the full runtime. Very solid movie.
It had largely evolved at this point in history. The shield wall is really just a phalanx by another name and era. As the armies of the shield wall were not professional soldiers, the shield wall was a good tool to take a largely ill-equipped and untrained mass and field some semblance of order. Really only the first couple lines needed to have much armor. The weakness was that it was not very flexible, somewhat hard to control, and once disordered it was quick to panic. There is a reason the Romans abandoned the phalanx formation prior to the late Republican era. (I can't remember exactly when.)Quote:
Let me ask you this, had they really moved away from the shield wall tactics at this point in history? If so, is it just because plate armor and archers had neutralized the effectiveness of it?