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The Green Knight s Ending, Explained
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The Green Knight Review: Arthurian Myths Meets Magical Realism – /Film
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Why, for starters, is the Green Knight green?
It s a question that s long vexed scholars of the 14th century chivalric romance âSir Gawain and the Green Knight. The movie, like the epic poem, is full of mysteries, most of them unspoken. But the knight s unlikely color â Why isn t he a more typical knightly blue? â is a question voiced by the characters of David Loweryâs adaptation, âThe Green Knight.â He s green, answers Dev Patel s Sir Gawain, because it s the shade of rot.
The Green Knight, as seen in Lowery s enchanting Arthurian dream, is an imposing tree of a man, with a wispy beard of twigs and a wooden mane whose movements rustle with the sound of bended, creaking branches. (He s played by a much-costumed Ralph Ineson.) Early in âThe Green Knight,â he rides on Christmas Day into King Arthur s court, cloaked in shadow, and offers a game. Strike him wherever you want, and he will repay the same stroke a year hence at his Green Chapel.
The Green Knight movie review: Dev Patel plays Sir Gawain in David Lowery?s marvelous film adaptation of the Arthurian legend
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Several heads roll, though it’s your mind that ll get truly blown by “The Green Knight,” a visually dazzling and thoughtful trip back to Camelot.
Director David Lowery, who crafted the magnificent and elegiac “A Ghost Story,” adapts a 14th-century epic poem into a surprisingly relevant and gleefully weird coming-of-age tale full of distressed ghosts, scheming bandits, naked giants and a talking fox. It’s not always obvious what points “The Green Knight” (★★★½ out of four; rated R; in theaters Friday) is trying to make, as Lowery chooses to leave a lot for audience interpretation. But here’s a fact: With a career-best performance, Dev Patel shines in a sumptuous, dark fantasy about honor, consequence and mortality.