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Kingdom of Heaven

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United Kingdom, Germany, Spain · 2005
Rated R · 2h 24m
Director Ridley Scott
Starring Orlando Bloom, Eva Green, Jeremy Irons, David Thewlis
Genre Action, Adventure, Drama, History, War

In grief over his wife's sudden death, village blacksmith Balian becomes a crusader on the road to Jerusalem. After a perilous journey to the holy city, the young man enters the retinue of the king, which is led by the treacherous Guy de Lusignan, who wishes to wage war against the Muslims for his own political and personal gain.

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What are critics saying?

60

Empire by

A frustratingly thin epic. You're left wanting more exposition, more character development, the tidying up of loose ends.

60

The New Yorker by Anthony Lane

One imagined that a movie about the Crusades would be gallant and mad; one feared that it might stoke some antiquated prejudice. But who could have dreamed that it would produce this rambling, hollow show about a boy?

70

Dallas Observer by Bill Gallo

So, if you want to see this loud but rather ordinary epic, don't expect its tricked-up cultural and theological messages to carry much water. For entertainment value, it's hard to beat the climactic siege of Jerusalem, a Ridley Scott-perfect half-hour that matches anything in "Troy" or "Gladiator" for sheer, bloody, helmet-bashing mayhem.

80

The Hollywood Reporter by Kirk Honeycutt

Fulfills the requirements of grand-scale moviemaking while serving as a timely reminder that in the conflict between Christianity and Islam it was the Christians who picked the first fight.

60

Village Voice by Michael Atkinson

The movie does what any self-respecting politician would do: sidestep the issues, soft-pedal mortal costs, talk a fat game, and divert your attention away from history with exercises in spectacle and power.

67

Entertainment Weekly by Owen Gleiberman

Scott, working from a script by William Monahan, is so busy balancing our sympathies, making sure no one gets offended, that he has made a pageant of war that would have gotten a thumbs-up from Eleanor Roosevelt.

70

Time by Richard Corliss

The battle skirmishes here mix sudden violence with slow-motion artistry. The attractive cast can sell an obsession or articulate a conundrum with equal fervor.

80

Variety by Todd McCarthy

Genuinely spectacular and historically quite respectable, Ridley Scott's latest epic is at its strongest in conveying the savagery spawned by fanaticism.

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