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The Madness of King George

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United Kingdom · 1994
Rated PG-13 · 1h 50m
Director Nicholas Hytner
Starring Nigel Hawthorne, Helen Mirren, Ian Holm, Rupert Graves
Genre Comedy, Drama, History

Three decades into King George’s reign, he begins to show signs of erratic behavior and dementia, leading to a plot from Parliament to have him declared insane and removed from the throne. The King’s prime minister and his wife Queen Charlotte, however, are determined to protect the throne and crown during this time of weakness.

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75

TV Guide Magazine by

Acclaimed stage director Nicholas Hytner was obviously determined to make his cinematic debut a memorable one. He doesn't just open up the play; he scatters it across sun-drenched country fields, seemingly all of London, and every nook and cranny of the royal residence. Despite the talents involved, however, the effect is surprisingly static and unexciting, probably because the source material is the kind of talky tour de force that is best carried off on the stage. Even so, Hawthorne's performance is tremendously intelligent and affecting.

88

ReelViews by James Berardinelli

The Madness of King George is much more than a simple study of one man's descent into insanity. With a style that's more tongue-in-cheek than melodramatic, the film is always witty and occasionally satirical. The characterizations are flawless (as well as historically accurate), and the political wrangling of the Tories and Whigs (led by PM Pitt and Charles Fox, respectively) provide a deliciously complex backdrop.

90

The New York Times by Janet Maslin

The Madness of King George mixes the ebullience of Tom Jones with a pop-theatrical royal back-stabbing that is reminiscent of films like The Lion in Winter. That makes it a deft, mischievous, beautifully acted historical drama with exceptionally broad appeal.

83

Entertainment Weekly by Lisa Schwarzbaum

The humor built into this sharp-witted human comedy is enhanced in the translation. Meanwhile, the arrestingly stylized imagery of the original Madness has not been lost.

100

Chicago Sun-Times by Roger Ebert

The Madness of King George tells the story of the disintegration of a fond and foolish old man, who rules England, yet cannot find his way through the tangle of his own mind. I am not sure anyone but Nigel Hawthorne could have brought such qualities to this role.

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