Siege of the Saxons

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Siege of the Saxons
Siege of the Saxons cinema poster.jpg
Original cinema poster
Directed by Nathan H. Juran
Written byJohn Kohn
Jud Kinberg
Produced byJud Kinberg
Charles H. Schneer
Starring Janette Scott
Ronald Lewis
Ronald Howard
Mark Dignam
John Laurie
Cinematography Wilkie Cooper
Edited by Maurice Rootes
Music by Laurie Johnson
Production
company
Ameran Films
Distributed by Columbia Pictures
Release dates
  • July 1963 (1963-07)(UK)
  • August 1963 (1963-08)(US)
Running time
85 mins
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

Siege of the Saxons is a 1963 British adventure film directed by Nathan H. Juran and released by Columbia Pictures. Starring Janette Scott and Ronald Lewis, the film is set in the time of King Arthur, but, as with many Arthurian themed films, the sets and style are from medieval England. The plot is also heavily influenced by Robin Hood. [1]

Contents

Plot

King Arthur learns that one of his knights is plotting to take over and marry his daughter. Soon the soldiers of double-dealing Edmund of Cornwall slay the king. However his daughter Katherine escapes with the help of outlaw Robert Marshall. Claiming that Katherine is dead, Edmund prepares to usurp the throne in league with Saxon invaders.

After coming close to death more than once at the hands of the sinister limping man, Katherine and Robert and other loyal countrymen rescue the great wizard Merlin from the hands of Edmund's men to help them save Camelot and England. They arrive at Camelot just as Edmund is about to be crowned. On Merlin's advice, Robert challenges Edmund to kill him as a traitor, by using Arthur's sword Excalibur.

Edmund is unable to draw the sword from the scabbard, whereupon Robert presents the sword to Katherine, the rightful heir, who draws it out easily. Katherine is recognised by the court as the new Queen. Following a battle against Edmund's remaining men and the invading force of Saxons, Katherine's armies prevail. She offers the lands of Edmund and other renegades to Robert, so that he can rule alongside her as King.

Cast

Production

Producer Charles H. Schneer made it after a series of fantasies with Ray Harryhausen. This and East of Sudan were made over 15 days, using stock footage. "Columbia had a lot of unused footage in their library," said the producer. "If 10 percent[ sic ] or less of a film made in the United Kingdom was comprised of stock footage, you received a government subsidy. I decided that would be a good commercial opportunity, so I made both pictures that way. I took the big action sequences out of Columbia's library." Siege of the Saxons used The Black Knight and East of Sudan used footage from Beyond Mombassa . [2]

It was the first of three consecutive films director Nathan Juran made for producer Charles Schnee in England. [3]

Shooting was conducted around the Home Counties in England and at Bray Studios in Berkshire. Oakley Court near Windsor, Berkshire was used for the castle interiors, Burnham Beeches in Buckinghamshire was the forest, and the final battle scenes were shot at Callow Hill, Virginia Water, in Surrey. [1]

The film reused a lot of costumes, props, and footage from the earlier and bigger-budgeted 1954 Columbia film, The Black Knight , starring Alan Ladd and costumes and props from the 1963 film Lancelot and Guinevere directed by and starring Cornel Wilde. The hero dons Alan Ladd's armor from The Black Knight. King Arthur wears the same costume as Brian Aherne did as Arthur in Lancelot and Guinevere and even looks much the same as Aherne. The film also uses sequences from some of Columbia's Robin Hood films. [1]

Release

The film was released on a double bill with Schneer's Jason of the Argonauts (1963), a film best remembered for its Ray Harryhausen special effects.

Schneer later hired Juran to direct another pair of films for a similar double bill: a large budget fantasy with special effects by Harryhausen, The First Men in the Moon , and a lower-budgeted English adventure heavily reliant on stock footage, East of Sudan . [1]

The Monthly Film Bulletin called it "statutory but good humoured and moderately jolly... hampered by flat direction and cramped settings." [4]

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References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Miller, John M. "Siege of the Saxons". Turner Classic Movies.
  2. Swires, Steve (March 1990). "Merchant of the Magicks Part Three". Starlog. p. 65.
  3. Swires, Steve (May 1989). "Nathan Juran: The Fantasy Voyages of Jerry the Giant Killer Part Two". Starlog Magazine. No. 142. p. 58.
  4. "SIEGE OF THE SAXONS". Monthly Film Bulletin. London. 30 (348): 133. 1 January 1963. ProQuest   1305833512.