Yorkists and Lancastrians square off. Just another Manic Monday. |
The
Henry plays also have several substantial chunks which I feel could be cut
entirely with no great loss to world literature. I get that Jack Cade is
terribly thematic, but blimey he’s dull – and do we really need all that French
action in Part 1? And – shameless personal prejudice – I’m also much less
tolerant of outdated production values than Ali is! So really I ought to have
hated these films, but in the end I found a lot to admire. The
historical-pedant side of my brain couldn’t be stopped from screaming
periodically, but the theatre-nerd part thoroughly enjoyed a lot of the
stage-craft.
The
slavish literalism of many of the previous films had been almost entirely done
away with – no painstakingly constructed interiors or (still worse) trips out
to film in a forest here. Intelligently tackling the sweeping nature of the
plot, an abstract set was used not only to cover everything from English prison
cells to French battlefields, but also to communicate and reflect the deterioration
of the realm itself – fading gradually from hopeful primary colours in Part 1 into
faded, muddy tones, to finally a bleak monochrome with sooty timbers and
blackened armour standing out against a melancholic snowfall. Brilliantly, the costumes
evolved in a mirroring fashion through the three plays. Not only did they echo
the degeneration in colour palette – fading from the cheery pastels and bold
primary tones of medieval illuminations into grim, scruffy tones of black and
grey – but the styles evolved as well.
By the time the saga concluded, the
action had passed into the hands of a rougher, more brutal generation,
corrupted by (or taking advantage of) the civil war and absence of authority
around them: and accordingly, the ornate, brightly coloured and rather
cumbersome costumes of the early players had been replaced by dark, brigand-like
outfits cobbled together from rough armour, headbands and an awful lot of
weaponry, solely designed for maximum effectiveness in a fight. By the middle
of Part 3, we hadn’t seen a splash of colour in a long time, and the sudden
rush of blues and silvers when the action moves to the French court, or the
blood-red of Lancastrian banners at Towton, was a visual jolt.
The
filming too took a leap forward imaginatively. I enjoyed the trick of actors
delivering their asides slyly into the camera, making the viewer complicit in
their schemes and plots. Still more impressive was the effective use of
stylized tableaux and sequences – the outstanding ones for me being Talbot’s
last stand and the moment where mirrors
were used to create a huge, synchronized, almost mythical-looking army from
about three actual actors at Towton.
The
performances, though, were a mixed bag. In the lead roles, I very much enjoyed Peter
Benson as the gentle and ineffectual King Henry – he managed to somehow be both
hopeless and endearing at the same time. He also had a remarkable gift for
making you stop noticing him right in the middle of a scene, fading away to the
background while your attention was caught by more strident characters. It was
a generous performance, as well as an accomplished one, allowing others to
constantly seize the centre stage. On the other hand, from her first entrance I
loathed Julia Foster as Queen Margaret –
strident, grating and stroppy, she lacked the range to tackle either the
romantic Suffolk scenes or her early subtler manipulation of Henry. In her hands,
Margaret was a bully and a scold, without vulnerability, guile or complexity.
All of this was particularly frustrating since Margaret is one of Shakespeare’s
best roles for women – there are enough plays out there where women only get to
play one or two emotions, to see a multi-faceted role like this reduced to a one-note
caricature was painful.
Elsewhere
in the cast, it was a similar story. While Bernard Hill made a charismatic and
watchable York, and Brian
Protheroe
was good as a shallow Edward of March, Mark Wing-Davey
failed to summon the inflated pride that would make Warwick pivot on a sixpence
over nothing more than a thwarted marriage alliance and suddenly swear
allegiance to the woman he’d spent the last 11 hours of drama fighting, and Ron
Cook as Richard of Gloucester failed to convince as a villain who could smile,
and murder while he smiled. But perhaps I’m being unfair on that last one. Like
I said at the beginning, I’m never going to love Shakespeare’s most enduring
piece of character assassination.
And
with that, I’ll conclude my guest appearance on the blog!