Henry VIII

6.8
20031h 36m

The life of Henry VIII of England from the disintegration of his first marriage to an aging Spanish princess until his death following a stroke in 1547, by which time he had married for the sixth time.

Production

Logo for Granada Television

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Henry VIII Trailer - ITV1 2003

Henry VIII Trailer - ITV1 2003

Seasons

2 Episodes • Premiered 2003

Still image for Henry VIII season 1 episode 1: Episode 1

1. Episode 1

Still image for Henry VIII season 1 episode 2: Episode 2

2. Episode 2

Cast

Photo of Ray Winstone

Ray Winstone

Henry VIII

Photo of Assumpta Serna

Assumpta Serna

Catherine of Aragon

Photo of Emilia Fox

Emilia Fox

Jane Seymour

Photo of Charles Dance

Charles Dance

Edward Stafford

Photo of Mark Strong

Mark Strong

Thomas Howard

Photo of Danny Webb

Danny Webb

Thomas Cromwell

Photo of Sean Bean

Sean Bean

Robert Aske

Photo of Thomas Lockyer

Thomas Lockyer

Edward Seymour

Photo of William Houston

William Houston

Thomas Seymour

Photo of David Suchet

David Suchet

Thomas Wolsey

Photo of Scott Handy

Scott Handy

Henry Percy

Photo of Dominic Mafham

Dominic Mafham

George Boleyn

Photo of Benjamin Whitrow

Benjamin Whitrow

Tomas Bolena

Photo of Michael Maloney

Michael Maloney

Thomas Cranmer

Photo of Emily Blunt

Emily Blunt

Catherine Howard

Photo of Clare Holman

Clare Holman

Catherine Parr

Photo of Lara Belmont

Lara Belmont

Mary Tudor

Photo of Hugh Mitchell

Hugh Mitchell

Edward VI

Photo of Tom Turner

Tom Turner

Francis Dereham

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

Now, the old adage of never letting the truth get in the way of a good story has to be applied to this rather well made, but otherwise pretty shallow dramatisation of the life of England's infamous King Henry VIII. Ray Winstone is efficient in the title role, but his style of acting reverts to bluster all to often - fine in a crime thriller, or as the cheeky East Londoner, but somehow just not great here. The associated characterisations are really all pretty flat, too - Joss Ackland has a decent stab at the role of his ruthless father Henry VII, but Charles Dance's Duke of Buckingham, David Suchet's Cardinal Wolsey and the headline-grabbing Anne Boleyn (Helena Bonham Cater) just don't work well enough at all to recreate the sense of peril, lust - for power and sex - and danger at this colourful, but lethal Tudor court. Nor do we really get from the pen of Peter Morgan, any sense of depth to their complex and volatile personas - no sense at all of what made them tick. It looks great, the settings at some of Engand's finest stately homes add richness to the quality of the production, but the narrative dwells way too long on the superficialities of the second wife, with little focus on the remainder of his lifetime, an of his subsequent four marriages. It certainly isn't an history lesson - loads of licence taken, much of which is forgivable given this is a drama, but it could have been so much more...

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