Director Ridley Scott confronts hundreds of years of religious conflict in KINGDOM OF HEAVEN. An epic film set in Europe and the Middle East, the story follows one man's struggle to better himself and the world around him. Orlando Bloom stars as Balian, a French blacksmith who is mourning the deaths of his wife and baby when his estranged nobleman father (Liam Neeson) arrives and asks him to join the Crusades in Jerusalem. Mindful that conducting the Lord's work will help him atone for his sins, Balian agrees, and embarks on the perilous journey. Along the way, he reveals his gifts of inherent goodness and fair treatment of all human beings. Upon reaching Jerusalem, a city where his meager beginnings no longer matter, Balian earns respect and fealty, while the evil Guy de Lusignan (Marton Csokas) looks down his aristocratic nose at the former laborer.
As he did in GLADIATOR, Scott explores the theme of a man who chooses his fate, instead of accepting the fate given to him at birth. Balian comes to life in Jerusalem, protecting the weak and defenseless as his father told him he must, and catching the eye of the beautiful Princess Sibylla (Eva Green), unhappily married to de Lusignan. Scott paints a stirring portrait of the struggle over Jerusalem among Christians, Jews, and Muslims. In doing so, he also shows the passionate fight for religious freedom. KINGDOM OF HEAVEN ably handles these delicate issues, effectively treating characters from all factions as individuals and not as stereotypes. By placing a virtuous man at the center of this conflict, Scott creates a powerful, universal story.
UMD Features:
Region 1
Note: This release is in the UMD format for Sony PSP players only.
Keep Case
Letterbox - 1.78
Widescreen - 1.78
Audio:
Dolby Digital Stereo 2.0 - English, Spanish, French
Subtitles - English, Spanish, French
Stars
Orlando Bloom: Actor, LORD OF THE RINGS (2001)
Eva Green: Actress, THE DREAMERS (2004)
Jeremy Irons: Actor, THE FRENCH LIEUTENANT'S WOMAN/REVERSAL OF FORTUNE
Brendan Gleeson: Actor/"Braveheart"
Marton Csokas:
Liam Neeson: Irish actor, EXCALIBUR/SCHINDLER'S LIST
David Thewlis: British Actor
Michael Sheen: Actor, UNDERWORLD (2003)
Eriq Ebouaney: Actor, LUMUMBA (2000)
Jouko Ahola: Actor, INVINCIBLE (2001)
Philip Glenister:
Kevin McKidd: Actor
Nikolaj Coster-Waldau: Actor
Steven Robertson: Actor, RORY O'SHEA WAS HERE (2005)
Alexander Siddig: Actor, STAR TREK: DEEP SPACE NINE
Edward Norton: Actor/Director
Director
Ridley Scott: British Director/Producer, ALIEN (1979), BLADE RUNNER (1982)
Screenwriter
William Monahan: Screenwriter, KINGDOM OF HEAVEN (2005)
Composer
Harry Gregson-Williams: Composer, SPY GAME (2001)
Editor
Dody Dorn: Editor
Director of Photography
John Mathieson: Director of Photography
Executive Producer
Branko Lustig: Producer, GLADIATOR (2000)
Executive Producer
Lisa Ellzey: Executive Producer, KINGDOM OF HEAVEN (2005)
Executive Producer
Terry Needham: Executive Producer, KINGDOM OF HEAVEN (2005)
Production Designer
Arthur Max: Production Designer/Actor
Costume Designer
Janty Yates: Costume Designer, MIAMI VICE (2006)
Review 1:
"[The film] stirs up powerful half-buried aesthetic energies simply by venturing into the chosen terrain....Best of all perhaps is Orlando Bloom's first glimpse of Jerusalem, an instant of digitized splendor that reawakens the occult dream that cinema can somehow literally transport us into the past."
Source: Film Comment
p.71-72 05/01/2005
Review 2:
"Where Scott scores is in the cinematography and set-pieces, with vast armies surging across sun-baked sand in almost Kurosawa-like ballets of light and colour."
Source: Uncut
p.129 07/01/2005
Review 3:
"There's a wealth of charisma among the supporting cast..."
Source: Sight and Sound
p.90 12/01/2005
Review 4:
"It's all very teeming and hordelike and impressive."
Source: Entertainment Weekly
p.60 05/13/2005
Review 5:
"Mr. Scott is a virtuoso of movie violence and he does not disappoint on that count here....Filled with scene after scene of choreographed mayhem."
Source: New York Times
p.E1 05/06/2005
Review 6:
"Working from a strong script by William Monahan and making full use of that solid cast and his own impeccable skill with imagery, Scott has fashioned an impressive film that resonates with lessons..."
Source: Los Angeles Times
p.E1 05/06/2005
Review 7:
"Scott delivers rousing entertainment layered with provocation."
Source: Rolling Stone
p.84 05/19/2005