Necra Movies
Lady Jane

Lady Jane (1986)

★ 6.90 2h 22m Drame

La mort du roi Henri VIII jette son royaume dans le chaos à cause des conflits de succession. Son faible fils Edward, est sur son lit de mort. Soucieux de garder l'Angleterre fidèle à la Réforme, un ministre intrigant John Dudley marie son fils, Guildford à Lady Jane Grey, qu'il place sur le trône après la mort d'Edward. Au début hostiles l'un à l'autre, Guildford et Jane tombent amoureux. Mais ils ne peuvent pas résister au cours du pouvoir qui mènera à leur chute ultime.

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Overview

La mort du roi Henri VIII jette son royaume dans le chaos à cause des conflits de succession. Son faible fils Edward, est sur son lit de mort. Soucieux de garder l'Angleterre fidèle à la Réforme, un ministre intrigant John Dudley marie son fils, Guildford à Lady Jane Grey, qu'il place sur le trône après la mort d'Edward. Au début hostiles l'un à l'autre, Guildford et Jane tombent amoureux. Mais ils ne peuvent pas résister au cours du pouvoir qui mènera à leur chute ultime.

Cast

  • Helena Bonham Carter as Lady Jane Grey
  • Cary Elwes as Guilford Dudley
  • John Wood as John Dudley, Duke of Nothumberland
  • Patrick Stewart as Henry Grey, Duke of Suffolk
  • Joss Ackland as Sir John Bridges
  • Michael Hordern as Dr. Feckenham
  • Jane Lapotaire as Princess Mary
  • Ian Hogg as Sir John Gates
  • Pip Torrens as Thomas
  • Richard Vernon as The Marquess of Winchester

Reviews

CinemaSerf 2024-11-17
★ 7
With Henry VIII recently dead and his young son Edward VI (Warren Saire) on the throne, the noble families of England are rapidly positioning themselves to provide him with a wife, or even better, an heir. It's the scheming Northumberland (John Wood) who conceives a plan with the equally ambitious Suffolk (Patrick Stewart) and his wife (Sara Kestelman) to marry his own son Guilford (Cary Elwes) to their daughter Jane (Helena Bonham Carter) so that her tenuous claim to the throne could be better upheld when the sickly young king died. Aware that the public would have little stomach for such an arrangement, and that the Princess Mary (Jane Lapotaire) would not give up her rights to succeed easily, this is a perilous course for these two families to take. Luckily, though, the young Jane is no match for their machinations and soon both she and her new husband are but pawns in a grander game. What the parents don't quite anticipate is that the couple actually start to fall in love, and begin to think that with her on the throne then maybe good can come of this usurpation. Can she survive for long enough once Edward is dead? It's an history, so we know what happened to whom and when, but as a well crafted drama it looks good and HBC and Elwes manage a degree of chemistry that works quite engagingly as the writing becomes increasingly on the wall for the pair. Wood and Kestelman also deliver quite effectively here as the schemers-in-chief, and as the plot thickens we do get a sense of just how powerless these young people were in the face of ambitious men who cared little for the wishes of their children or their country. It is too long, and could lose twenty minutes - especially at the start - without compromising this chronology of a woman little known to posterity but whom, if writer Chris Bryant is to be believed, might have made for a decent Queen of England.