Entertainment Weekly by Ray Rahman
Not quite as smart as the recent Wolf Hall or as deliciously decadent as the bygone The Tudors, Versailles fails to live up to its regal potential. [30 Sep 2016, p.54]
User Rating
Creators
Simon Mirren,
David Wolstencroft
Cast
George Blagden,
Stuart Bowman,
Maddison Jaizani
Genre
Drama
28-year-old King Louis XIV has finally taken over sole command of France in 1667, commissioning the luxurious Palace of Versailles. Meant to entice, imprison and control the nobles who flock to its gates, betrayal, politics, love and brutality line Louis XIV's path on his journey to become the most powerful monarch in Europe.
Entertainment Weekly by Ray Rahman
Not quite as smart as the recent Wolf Hall or as deliciously decadent as the bygone The Tudors, Versailles fails to live up to its regal potential. [30 Sep 2016, p.54]
Variety by Sonia Saraiya
It is frequently lovely to behold. The real Versailles is of course gorgeous, and the series renders the palace through expensive sets and substantial on-location filming. But like the plot, the prettiness is a little superficial; this is more the CW’s “Reign” than Starz’s “Outlander.”
Collider by Allison Keene
The sprawling story is definitely more concerned with soapy plots than the realities of court and the battle for power between the Protestant and Roman Catholic Church, a la Wolf Hall, but like Versailles itself the results are charmingly ostentatious.
San Francisco Chronicle by David Wiegand
The first four episodes of the series are rather talky, although heaven knows there are moments of eye-opening action of the carnal variety. ... But the talk, at least, is revealing and sophisticated, not to mention often filled with intrigue.
Los Angeles Daily News by Rob Lowman
Versailles has glamor and spectacle, but it’s hardly an epic drama. It dreamily drifts along for the first few episodes, introducing the characters and concentrating on outrageous behavior. All the military-strategy sessions blur together.
The Hollywood Reporter by Keith Uhlich
The series looks astoundingly cheap. ... The anachronistic electronic score by Eduardo Noya Schreus, aka NOIA, gives a galvanizing jolt to what is otherwise an irritatingly unoriginal production.
Loading recommendations...
Loading recommendations...