Normal Rob
Well-known member
Due to the absence of anything vaguely decent on tele last night I watched the second episode. I found it much better than the first an will keep watching. Glad I gave it a second chance.
Wolf Hall just gets better and better.
Another utterly compelling and masterfully understated performance by Mark Rylance tonight, with some real flashes of menace. Damian Lewis as Henry VIII provides equally compelling viewing. But I love Norfolk -"I said nobody comes in! If I had a crossbow, I'd shoot your ****ing head off!"
One word: stunning
Outstanding drama. It's no surprise to learn it's screenplay was penned by the same chap who wrote the screenplay for the Tinker Tailor remake.
The critisism that nothing happens is, in my opinion, way off the mark. Every conversation, every sentence uttered by Cromwell moves the story on , there is so much going on. I think people expect more swordplay and action from historical dramas but of course we all know the real power plays were made behind closed doors between influential characters and not so much on the battlefield. Henry had inherited a kingdom reeling from overseas and civil war, the last thing he wanted was to jeapordise the relatively stable England by going to war again.
So, someone called Machiavelli is praising a programme about Renaissance skulduggery and an all-powerful and highly feared king. Can't think why
The critisism that nothing happens is, in my opinion, way off the mark. Every conversation, every sentence uttered by Cromwell moves the story on , there is so much going on. I think people expect more swordplay and action from historical dramas but of course we all know the real power plays were made behind closed doors between influential characters and not so much on the battlefield. Henry had inherited a kingdom reeling from overseas and civil war, the last thing he wanted was to jeapordise the relatively stable England by going to war again.
You're right about the fascination about the behind-the-scenes politicking and that we don't need battle scenes to make it exciting but England wasn't reeling from an overseas war: there hadn't been a foreign campaign for nearly 100 years. It was the possibility of civil strife that was exercising Cromwell's (and others) minds. Without a legitimate (male) heir, there was a strong probability of open warfare breaking out again. Although getting rid of Anne was clearing the way for Jane Seymour, it also broke up a particular faction at court