The Madness of King George Movie Review
The Madness of King George Review
"The Madness of King George" Overview

Rating: PG
1995
Cast and Crew
Director : Nicholas HytnerProducer : Stephen Evans,David Parfitt
Screenwiter : Alan Bennett
Starring : Nigel Hawthorne,Helen Mirren,Ian Holm,Rupert Graves,Amanda Donohoe,Rupert Everett
1994's last Oscar contender crawled into Austin last week, the much-heralded
film The Madness of King George. Adapted from the acclaimed stage play, Nigel
Hawthorne reprises his lead role as King George III, the British monarch during
the time of the American Revolution, who didn't quite have a full bag of
marbles.
It all starts innocently enough, with a relatively sane King George
administering government alongside the Queen (Helen Mirren). But soon George
falls victim to an unpredictable nervous disorder, causing the King to
completely lose his mind. For the next 20 minutes, people inexplicably chase
the rambling King in his bedclothes, either in his castle or on the fields. I
suppose there's a fine line between whether you can actually tackle a King or
if he should be allowed to gallop around England unmolested, but I'm just a
cold-hearted anti-Royalist American who wouldn't understand the intricacies of
managing the throne.
The real story, and it isn't much of one, involves the King's son, who wants to
be appointed Regent by Parliament to rule in his father's place. Two factions
emerge: those who were given bribes and kickbacks by King George, and those
who have been promised them by the son. And as the King falls deeper into his
stupor, the factions of the son begin to gain power.
Meanwhile, the King is under the medical care of an unorthodox doctor (Ian
Holm), where he spends most of his time in a straightjacket or tied to a chair
in restraint. Fortunately, this seems to be just the right treatment, and it's
a race against time for the King's return to health in order to thwart his
son's ascension.
You can probably already tell that this story never really goes anywhere. It's
just a simple tale set in the grandest of settings. The acting is basically
perfunctory: even the critically acclaimed Hawthorne isn't that great. Some
of the costumes and hairstyles look like they're straight out of Monty Python.
Thankfully, most of the humor here works, but on the whole, the film falls to
mediocrity.
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Review by Christopher Null
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