A Man for All Seasons (TV Movie 1988) Poster

(1988 TV Movie)

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7/10
Cannot stand comparison with the Scofield/Zinnemann version
JamesHitchcock24 June 2010
The first filmed version of Robert Bolt's play "A Man for All Seasons" was made by Fred Zinnemann in 1966. The play tells the story of Sir Thomas More, the 16th-century writer, scholar, lawyer, philosopher and theologian who became Lord Chancellor of England and a confidant of Henry VIII, and about More's execution on false charges of treason after he fell out with the King over his divorce from Catherine of Aragon and his break with the Roman Catholic Church.

Charlton Heston was a great admirer of Bolt's play, in which he had starred a number of times on the stage, and had hoped to be chosen to play More in Zinnemann's film. He was, of course, disappointed in that ambition (the role went to Paul Scofield), but when, more than twenty years later, he was given the chance to direct and act in his own version for the TNT television network he eagerly accepted the opportunity.

Heston was not, however, (as his autobiography makes clear) a great admirer of Zinnemann's film or of Scofield's performance, which he regarded as too "astringent". He therefore sought to make his own performance here quite different from Scofield's, playing More as warmer, more humorous and less ascetic and intellectual. Personally, I felt that Scofield set a standard which it would be difficult for anyone, even an actor of Heston's stature, to better, but I felt that Heston's performance in this film represented a quite valid and praiseworthy attempt to find an alternative interpretation.

And yet, this film is not in the same class as Zinnemann's- indeed, in my view comes nowhere near it. There are several reasons for this. Heston's film is considerably longer than the original- indeed, it was recently shown on British television as a two-part miniseries. For the purposes of Zinnemann's film, Bolt (who wrote the screenplay) pared down his original text, omitting altogether one major character (the Spanish Ambassador), to produce something more suited to the cinema than the stage. Heston's film restores these cuts, presumably to produce something of the regulation length required by the American TV schedules, and the result is a film which flows less easily and lacks the dramatic urgency of the first film.

Another change Bolt made for the 1966 film was to abandon the Brechtian device of the "Common Man", the character who acts as the narrator in the play. Again, this character is restored in Heston's version, and again I do not think that the change is for the better. The character played by Roy Kinnear, a wily, self-interested comic rogue, seems out of place in the tragic drama of More. Brecht's "alienation effect" may be a valid technique in the theatre (although critics and dramatic theorists are divided on this point), but for me it certainly does not work in the different media of television and the cinema.

In the original film all the cast were excellent without a single poor performance. Here, few really stand out. Apart from Sir John Gielgud as Cardinal Wolsey, in a cameo appearance even briefer than that of Orson Welles. The only one of the cast who can stand comparison with the earlier film is Richard Johnson as the Duke of Norfolk. The role of Norfolk is played in a quite different way in the two films. In the earlier version, Norfolk, as played by Nigel Davenport, was a basically decent if intellectually undistinguished man who did his best to protect his friend More. Here, the character played by Johnson is a fundamentally more unpleasant character, who hides his moral cowardice beneath a show of hearty friendship. Despite claiming to be More's friend, he eventually acts as the presiding judge at his show trial and in that capacity sentences him to death. (In Zinnemann's film this was done by another character, the Lord Chief Justice).

None of the other actors stand out. Martin Chamberlain's King Henry VIII is a pale copy of Robert Shaw's. Even an actress as talented as Vanessa Redgrave was not as authoritative as Wendy Hiller as More's wife Alice. (Redgrave had a cameo appearance as Anne Boleyn in the 1966 version). According to Heston, Redgrave originally intended to give Alice a (historically correct) West Country accent, but this was changed because it was feared that American audiences would find it difficult to understand. In the final version of the film, Alice speaks with a Northern accent, although I wonder if Americans found this any easier to cope with.

The two interpretations I did not like in this version were from Benjamin Whitrow as Thomas Cromwell and Jonathan Hackett as Richard Rich. Whitrow's Cromwell had too much the smooth, silky politician about him and not enough of the thug. At one point More compares Cromwell to a dockside bully; a description which admirably fits Leo McKern's blustering character but which seems lost on Whitrow's. The mistake Hackett makes is to confuse moral weakness with cowardice. John Hurt's character is weak, but only in the sense that he lacks the moral strength to put his principles before his ambitions. Where those ambitions are concerned he can be steely and ruthless in pursuit of them. Hackett's Rich is too much of a physical coward to take any risks; he comes across as the sort of man who would do anything for a quiet life, even exchanging the life of a courtier for that of a schoolmaster (which is the choice More offers him).

As an actor, Heston gives a perfectly respectable performance in this film (even though personally I would prefer Scofield's). He was not, however, a particularly experienced director (this was the last of only three films that he directed during his career) and the weakness of his version is that he was not able to bring out great performances from his supporting cast in the way that Zinnemann had done. 7/10, compared to 10/10 for Zinnemann's film.
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8/10
A Pleasant Surprise
TudorLady21 May 2009
I watched this film with some trepidation as the 1966 version has long been a favourite of mine. I could not imagine an American actor portraying my hero, Thomas More. However, I enjoyed it very much. Charlton Heston's performance was a revelation. I thought he did a really good job of showing More's famous wit but at times, his anguish too. Vanessa Redgrave's Dame Alice seemed at times almost a caricature ('A printed boook!') Yes I know Alice was from Yorkshire but Redgrave's 'common touch' was a bit overdone! Ben Whitrow as Cromwell was wonderful. Genial yet sinister, loved it! As for Roy Kinnear, he was just perfect as the common man, I always thought it a shame that this part was left out of the 1966 film. Having seen the play a few times, this is truer to the stage version but I wouldn't compare the two films, they are both very good.
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8/10
Couldn't Disagree More
bpolhemus7 February 2005
The 1966 film starring Scofield was a throwback to film-making of ten or fifteen years earlier.

Heston was brilliant as More and Redgrave was outstanding as Mistress More. The teleplay had much more of the sense of the original stage play than the hacked-up Hollywood flick the OP speaks of.

Guess it's a matter of taste, but Heston has NEVER been wooden, EVER. One of the greatest actors of our age. In my opinion only Richard Burton could probably have been a better casting choice than Heston--and he was dead by this time.

Heston was also remarkably gracious and effusive about Miss Redgrave's talent, even though they would never see eye-to-eye politically. He is a gracious man, a talented actor, and a wonderful husband and father. Would there were many more like him out of the dreck of Hollywood.
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9/10
Be fair: this is a great film!
fellowmelad9 July 2007
I think most of the comments on IMDb (or Amazon) for this film are rather unfair. Unfair to the actor Charlton Heston and unfair to the film itself. Please let me explain:

It seems to me a sort of "England, England!" thing is standing in the way of a fair and objective comment on this film (as if I could give one...). Even though Charlton Heston has sunk very much in my esteem since "Bowling for Columbine" I feel I need to set the record straight (for my own peace of mind): This film is great, and believe you me, I am a Scofield fan (I simply adored him in the 1966 version of this film as well as in the 1994 Martin Chuzzlewit television film/mini-series).

But to do away with this 1988 version of Heston as a failed attempt to improve on Fred Zinneman is not only an unfair comparison but also a foolish one. To begin with: Heston's version is far closer and more true to Robert Bolt's play than is the Fred Zinneman version. In addition, Heston's performance, although more obviously dramatical than that of Scofield, is more passionate. The scene in which he thrashes Roper and stands for his daughter Meg is simply the greatest ("They put about too nimbly!!!"), as is his performance with the Duke of Norfolk when they discuss water spaniels. Next to Heston, the performance of his fellow actors should not be discarded.

Roy Kinnear, bless his soul, is brilliant as the common man (a Robert Bolt invention that stayed alive in this version but was left out of the 1966 Zinneman production)

In addition, the role of the king is played simply brilliantly by Martin Chamberlain. The scene in More's garden is a scene that will never be mastered.

Vanessa Redgrave gives one of her finest performances as More's wife. The scene in the Tower where they part for the last time is always tearing me apart! (Oh God, all these plain simple men!)

And of course the roles of the "two ugly ladies" Benjamin Withrow and Jonathan Hackett are delicious and not to be found anywhere so great in the 1966 Zinneman version.

So I beg you: Please be fair, enjoy the Zinneman version, but also take the time to (learn to) appreciate Heston's version. The man has his faults, but just appreciate that what he has done right!
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7/10
A play for all eras.
mark.waltz1 April 2022
Warning: Spoilers
When they did the second version of the Robert Bolt play, obviously the producers decided to stick closer with the original script of what people had seen in the theater on stage rather than adapted for the screen like I've been done in 1966. Charlton Heston is here in probably one of his last great performances as Sir Thomas More, the nobleman sentenced to death for daring to question the King Henry VIII on his decision to divorce his first wife and marry again. Martin Chamberlain is different from most of the screen King Hal's I've seen, still fairly young and not the turkey leg eating glutton that most movies present. After all, he was just getting rid of his first wife and had five more to go. Vanessa Redgrave is More's wife, hysterically nagging him at one point yet loving him deeply even though they fight constantly. Ironically, she had a small role in the 1966 film. Adrienne Thomas is their daughter, going through her own youthful romantic problems so she really isn't aware of the goings-on politically until it's too late.

In a small role (but getting billing about the title and his picture on the advertisement) John Gielgud is Cardinal Wolsey who spends the first quarter of the film arguing with Heston over the issue, and makes the most of his limited role. Roy Kinnear, one of the great unsung British character actors, narrates the play, speaking directly to the viewer as if he were an actor looking out to the audience and breaking the fourth wall. Through him, you get to learn the various characters and their place in history and their relationship to More and King Henry. The composer of the music is ironically the king himself, and it's actually quite pleasant to listen to.

I wouldn't call this a great film because it is more like something you'd see on PBS or the BBC rather than a major cable channel like TNT, but it is an interesting concept, reminiscent of the type of plays that would be filmed for TV back in the 50's. Of course, the production is a lot more opulent and and beautiful color with great costumes and fine production values all around. Heston is relishing the opportunity to play this part, and is very subtle, something that was lacking in most of his later performances. Here, he's playing a historical character, and not trying to chew his way out of the Encyclopedia Britannica. Redgrave is funny and moving, and her last seen with Heston is quite tender. Richard Johnson, Benjamin Whitrow and John Hudson round out the fine supporting cast. Even though this took place several centuries after "The Lion in Winter", the tone of the film is very similar to that 1968 classic. While it is mostly conversation and very little action, it is a great history lesson and a reminder of the division necessary between church and state.
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8/10
Heston Fulfills A Dream
bkoganbing5 October 2008
One of Charlton Heston's great disappointments in his career was that he did not get to do the original film of A Man For All Seasons. Heston couldn't really complain though, Paul Scofield had done the play on the London stage and Heston never faulted Scofield's Academy Award winning performance.

But he made sure he did get to do another screen version after appearing on stage in the production of Robert Bolt's play. He did something else too, what you see Heston in is how it actually was originally presented on stage with the Everyman Character, done here by Roy Kinnear, as a narrator.

When Bolt did the 1966 version for the screen, he adapted his own work and dropped the Everyman character probably because Fred Zinneman who directed the film wanted it that way. I believe Zinneman was right that what he did was better suited for the screen.

That's not to decry Heston's performance because as a man who made a career out of playing great men of character and integrity, Thomas More was definitely a role he was most suited for. I can certainly understand his disappointment. By the way, Heston's other goal never realized was to do Abraham Lincoln, but I'm guessing he never got a suitable script or story.

With son Fraser Clarke Heston as producer, I'm sure Heston got to pick who he would appear with and we are fortunate to have John Gielgud as Cardinal Wolsey, though Orson Welles in build and in acting style was much more suited for the role. Heston's very good friend from across the pond, Richard Johnson, got to play the key role of the Duke of Norfolk.

Though this production of A Man For All Seasons suffers from comparison to the Paul Scofield version, it can definitely stand on its own merits and Charlton Heston and the rest of the cast have nothing to be ashamed of.
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Heston is not Scofield
larcher-27 September 1999
Heston is not Scofield, and this is not what the movie version is. Still, it preserves the core of More's life and meaning, and is far better than the typical TV-movie (if only because it dares to take out of the closet the old-fashioned notion that life means nothing unless there is something to die for).
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7/10
There can be no "Man For All Seasons' without a Thomas More".
peacham1 April 2002
While this television remake of "A Man For All Seasons' is closer to the script of the play,it falls far below the masterpiece original film version. The main problem is the miscasting of Charlton Heston as Thomas More. His performace ranges from Bombast to boredom. Never a strong actor all his flaws show here,especially when compared to Paul Scofield's masterfully poignant performance in the original film.Roy Kinear as Common Man holds best of show honors. He is a delightfully sly narrator and covers the role of Matthew with ease. Vanessa Redgrave is as strong as Wendy Hiller as More's wife Alice but Adrianne Thomas' Lady Margaret falls far short of Susanna York's memorable portayal.Even the great Sir John Gielgud is miscast here. As Cardinal Wolsey his voice is indeed imposing but his slight frame in no way conveys the "full fed prince of the church" that Wolsey was. Over all it is a good effort at preserving the play, but for emotional power,well developed relationships and emotional passion...see the original film.
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8/10
Subtler and wider in scope than the Scofield film
son_of_cheese_messiah1 March 2014
Having long been an admirer of the 66 film, I watched this TV version with little expectation. I had never even heard of it until I happened to look up the film on wikipedia. The entry there had very little to say this TV version (not usually a promising sign but my curiosity was sufficiently roused for me to acquire a copy. I was very pleasantly surprised.

This version sticks much closer to the original play than the famous film which removed many lines of dialogue and even whole characters (such as Chapuis). I guess that is what Hollywood does: simplify for a mass audience.

Many important points were thus removed. The entire subplot of Phillip of Spain's support for More. The threat of a Northern uprising and More's desire to have no part of it. These additions contextualise Henry's divorce in the world of contemporaneous European politics and his desire to stave off the dynastic wars which had dominated the previous century. Without them, as in the 66 film, Henry's actions can seem mere caprice or selfishness in his part. And of course many of Bolt's lines, poetic and thrilling in themselves, are brutally excised.

The restoration of these would make this version worthy. However it stands on its own merits too. 'Quiet', 'subtle' and indeed 'understated' are three words that come to mind about this version generally. Heston is far subtler and warmer is the role of More than Scofield, although perhaps less compelling. I'm a great fan of Leo McKern's Cromwell but in some ways Benjamin Whitrow is better, his performance having a quiet menace about it by comparison too McKern's more obvious angry and domineering performance. The great Roy Kinnear is memorable as his composite character too.

Not all the actors are up to the task. Vanessa Redgrave delivers an overblown performance at variance to the general tenor of the film. She also affects a curious northern accents for some reason. Weaker still is Jonathon Hackett as Richard Rich, presumably he was cast because of his strong physical resemblance to the historical Rich but his performance is dull and wooden.

Certainly this is a version all fans of the play or film should see.
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7/10
Good Remake.
AaronCapenBanner6 October 2013
Charlton Heston both directed and stars in this new version of the Robert Bolt play, that was first filmed as the Academy Award winning version with Paul Scofield. Heston plays Chancellor Sir Thomas More this time, as he steadfastly refuses to violate his Catholic faith by recognizing the new marriage of English king Henry VIII, who was fond of trying his opponents for treason, which is what exactly happens to More.

A well acted and intelligently presented remake that, while it isn't as good as the 1966 version, is still a compelling film that features timeless themes of staying true to one's beliefs and faith, no matter the cost, or how high an authority you must defy, which is still very much relevant today.
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5/10
curious only to watch the clearly second best
dartleyk4 August 2013
standing alone it might be a 6, even a 7; standing next to the masterpiece a 5 is generous; heston is a stock Hollywood movie star with rock-jawed delivery in every movie basically playing himself the Hollywood star; you see a clip of him on Carson it's the same, ben-hur, it''s the same; scofield is simply another level, thoughtful, wide dynamic range, crisp- and the supporting production design again no contest; maybe a personal coup for heston to get the part he wanted in 66, but it's very, very risky to remake a gem- a la the branagh remakes of olivier; they're good but as this does they pale next to the original gems, specially when you have nothing to add like an updated circumstance, romeo+juliet become west side story; zinnemann really got it right, a highly rewarding movie on every level- sets, score, you name it- and no need to go elsewhere
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10/10
A major improvement
Agamemnon22 May 2001
The 1988 version of "A Man For All Seasons" is a far better movie than the earlier version. Heston simply blows Schofield away. In fact, everyone from the "common man", Cromwell, and Norfolk are far better in this version. It is far more suspenseful because you do not spend so much time wincing at the robot-like actors in the earlier version. Never before has a remake so greatly overshadowed its predecessor.
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1/10
Why bother remaking perfection?
sdavid-4166018 April 2021
The obvious answer is that the 1988 remake of the 1966 Oscar winner was nothing more than a Charlton Heston vanity project starring Charlton Heston, directed by Charlton Heston, and produced by Fraser Heston, Charlton Heston's son. Fraser Heston rose to fame as an infant portraying the infant Moses in Cecil B. DeMille's The Ten Commandments, starring - of course - Charlton Heston.

Thomas More the lawyer and statesman is a blatantly inappropriate role for Charlton Heston, who in fairness to him, played pretty good cowboys in Will Penny and The Big Country without overacting too badly. If only Thomas More had been a cowpoke instead of Chancellor of England, Charlton Heston might have won the Oscar for Best Actor instead of Paul Scofield.
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A version that is faithful to the stage play's script
Tom-46421 December 1998
This made-for-TV version of "A Man for All Seasons" both wins and loses when compared to the more famous movie version of the show, which stars Paul Scofield as Thomas More. It wins, because it stays faithful to Mr. Bolt's original theatrical script, and so keeps much of the play's impact that was lost to "production values" in the big-budget movie release. It loses, in that the main characters, especially Mr. Heston's Thomas More, are weaker than those of the movie version. For example, Mr. Heston completely misses nuances of language that Mr. Scofield caught and used to great advantage; but the supporting actors in this version (Vanessa Redgrave as More's wife comes especially to mind) are far stronger than in the movie version. On the whole, though, I highly recommend that you see this version, mainly to watch Mr. Bolt's craftsmanship that was totally lost in the movie version.
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9/10
In some ways, superior to the Scofield version
Deusvolt19 January 2017
Warning: Spoilers
I just watched this. In some ways, it is even better than the Paul Scofield version. Why? This shows a more vulnerable Thomas More, one who was afraid and who cries. The Scofield portrayal was rather on the stoic side. Here More is one who could use legal legerdemain to escape condemnation and yet in the end speak forcefully about his secret convictions. And of course, while I have not seen or remember Scofield in other film roles, I must submit that Heston is a very versatile and capable actor. But I admit the Scofield version is one of my favorite films of all time. I must see the latter version again which I have seen three times in original release in theater, on TV broadcast and on beta-tape for better comparison as memory escapes me on key scenes.
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8/10
Gripping Story
wruzek6 April 2021
A story that we should all know of today where a person stays with their righteousness in spite of having to pay the ultimate price.
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4/10
From his cold, dead hands...
JoeB1318 January 2012
Warning: Spoilers
This adaptation of a Man for All Seasons actually make Thomas Moore less sympathetic. Charlton Heston plays him like he's playing Ben Hur or Moses... with this kind of overdrawn biblical epicness that seems a bit silly.

I think what would have been funnier would be the outtakes between Charlton and Vanessa Redgrave talking about politics between takes.

I honestly felt the Scofeild version gave Moore more humanity.

To be fair, though, even though AMFAS was part of my wonderful Catholic upbringing, I just can't see Moore as a sympathetic person at this point in my life. He threw away his life for really, nothing.

Some of the costumes are nice, and they reintroduced the "Common Man" character as an in-joke. But overall, an unneeded remake.
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