George was born on 12 August 1762, the first son of George III and Queen Charlotte. He was made prince of Wales five days later. George III suffered a particularly violent bout of ‘madness’ in November 1788. The plots and political manoeuvring of the first ‘regency crisis’ lasted until February of the following year, by which time the prince seemed on the brink of becoming regent. Then, quite unexpectedly the king recovered. George was left completely exposed, looking like a cynical, heartless figure who had exalted in his father’s distress and illness and tried to use this terrible national crisis to get himself into a position of power so that he could pay off his debts. When he died in 1830, at the age of 67, George joined the ranks of ‘least loved’ English monarchs. He wasn’t a psychopath like Richard III, a serial wife-killer like Henry VIII, a cowardly usurper like King John. His crimes were relatively mild—he was profligate with the nation’s money, he was thought to have mistreated his wife, and to have been rather too eager to take over from his poor, mad father, George III. And yet his obituaries were almost universally savage—‘an odious beast’, ‘of all known beings the most selfish’, and so on. Using dialogue based entirely on original sources (diaries, letters etc..) the film combines drama and documentary elements to tell George’s story and to explain, from his perspective, how this intelligent, cultured and civilized man came to be painted in such monstrous terms. |
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Ratings: | IMDB: 0.0/10 | |
Released: | February 28, 2004 | |
Runtime: | 90 min | |
Genres: | History | |
Crew: | Tim Kirby | |
AdChris : OMG thanks for the link to that EP of them on YT. That was a awesome look into the guys an...