

- The tudors season 1 episode 10 opening scene series#
- The tudors season 1 episode 10 opening scene tv#
Sure, the show's creators wanted to portray Henry as "a hottie," but this casting choice stretches the audience's willing suspension of disbelief a bit far. King Henry VIII looked little like Jonathan Rhys Meyers. So much, in fact, that I had to make an entire page devoted to the liberties the show's creators took. While I enjoyed the first four episodes of Showtime's " The Tudors" immensely, there were some historical inaccuracies which irked me greatly.
The tudors season 1 episode 10 opening scene series#
And just like his final wife, Catherine Parr, was no doubt relieved when she out-lived Henry, by the time its last episode limped to the end, The Tudors’ audience were thankful it was all over, too.Historical Inaccuracies in the Showtime Television Series "The Tudors"

The one fact everyone knows about Henry VIII is that he had six wives, so The Tudors was, exhaustingly, always going to have include them all. Meyers, meanwhile, mainly just stomped around palaces as the show ploughed ever faster through history. Henry Cavill’s face was obscured by a large beard historically accurate as a depiction of Charles Brandon, 1st Duke of Suffolk, yes, but unfortunately comical as a result. That she was a highlight of the last two seasons spoke volumes.Īs the characters became ever older, the opportunities for inserting those gratuitous sex scenes became fewer. The viewers had accepted many absurdities up to this point but having the king bellow: “She looks like a horse,” about the notably beautiful Stone – a woman whose main acting job prior to putting on a dodgy German accent as Anne of Cleves was putting on a dodgy American one at the 2007 Brit awards – was shark-clearing levels of “huh?”. Henry rushes to meet her and finds he has been sent “a Flanders mare”, played by formerly successful singer of song Joss Stone. This failed ageing-up of Meyers occurs at the point in which the famously plain Anne of Cleves is introduced. A raspy voice does not an old monarch make. In place of an obese old man we get the chiselled actor with a touch of grey in his hair and every line delivered like a blender mixing gravel. Unfortunately, instead of recasting the youthful Meyers with a bulky actor who could play the stinking, rotting heap of flesh the king became, they kept Meyers on. Jonathan Rhys Meyers plays the young Henry as a lusty, thrusty and hungry tyrant. Performances such as these gave us two great seasons of The Tudors, with both history and histrionics in an entertaining mix. Kings and popes strut across the screen in a flurry of insults and violence, with Peter O’Toole portraying a delightfully sensuous and worldly Pope Paul III.

The tudors season 1 episode 10 opening scene tv#
A childish and petulant ruler who casts aside his servants at whim? Put this on TV today and no one would miss its pertinence. Sam Neill, Jeremy Northam and James Frain all play advisers to King Henry VIII who, despite their loyal service to the throne, come to gore-spattered endings. There was more to The Tudors than just bonking and beheading, however. Composer Thomas Tallis has an unhistorical, though undeniably racy, gay romp with a courtier, and other characters get this gay-washing, too. The very first episode, for example, features Henry Cavill deflowering a maiden from then on no aspect of Tudor history was safe from being eroticised. In its prime, it was a show as overstuffed with titillation as the prominent codpieces it displayed. W ith its conspiring nobles, bloody executions and explicit sex, The Tudors was a proto- Game of Thrones.
