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  1. MICHÔD: There are some killer lines in the plays, but we had a rule: you either do it all and you do it with purity, or you do none of it. That was the first guiding principle. That was the first ...

  2. The muddy morass that Michôd makes of the Battle of Agincourt was a central part of his whole reason for taking on the Henry V story, despite it having already been brought to film by legends ...

  3. David Michod likes an egg metaphor. Whether it’s having had all of them “in one basket” over the past few years as he worked on The King -- which received a royal eight-minute standing ...

  4. His goal was to unite the French and English thrones, and had he not died, he had a good chance at succeeding, at least in the short term. None of this suggests a man who struggled with the morality of battle or conquest, but rather someone who was a practical ruler taking advantage of the weakness of France at a particular moment in time.

  5. Hal (Timothée Chalamet), wayward prince and reluctant heir to the English throne, has turned his back on royal life and is living among the people. But when his tyrannical father dies, Hal is crowned King Henry V and is forced to embrace the life he had previously tried to escape. The King is the newest film from director David Michôd ...

  6. Michôd says Netflix is making the kinds of films he grew up loving. And as a filmmaker, his approach is unaltered by screen size; while he readily admits Animal Kingdom did very well for him, he hazards that “95 per cent” of the people who saw the film saw it on a TV. “When Brad Pitt and I were trying to prep War Machine, we just knew ...

  7. In the film, based on several William Shakespeare plays, Pattinson portrays the son of the French king who instigates war with Henry V (Timothée Chalamet). The “Lighthouse” star appears with ...

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