Skip to Main Content Skip to Left Navigation Skip to Product Information Tabs Site information and information for assistive technology users

A Knight's Tale (Special Edition) (Widescreen) Products and Promotions

Target Bullseye

Site Navigation

Target.com Navigation

Christmas Delivered. Free shipping when you spend $50 on 100,000+ select items. 2-Day Sale. Starts Friday at 5AM. Preview the Deals.
Quick Info

A Knight's Tale (Special Edition) (Widescreen)

Be the first to write a review.

$5.00 List: $14.94Save: $9.94 (67%)

The following promotions apply

    $2.99 shipping/order on Movies Music Books

Prices, promotions, styles and availability may vary by store and online.

Availability:

In Stock

Print this page (opens print dialogue)
Email a Friend

Email this Item

You must be signed in to share this item by email. Sign in now to continue.

Your email address:

The email address you provide in this form will only be used to send this one time email message

Separate multiple recipients with commas

Your message is on its way! Send another email?

Close Email Layer

Items purchased from the Music, Movies + Books category have a standard shipping fee of $2.99 per order. Items in your order purchased from other categories are subject to standard shipping charges.

See offer details. Opens in New Window

Details

Description

    This crowd-pleasing medieval adventure tale is very loosely inspired by Geoffrey Chaucer's -The Canterbury Tales and mixes the anachronistic elements of modern-day rock music and colloquialisms with a period setting and characters. Heath Ledger stars as William Thatcher, a low-born 14th century squire who, in a fit of inspired spontaneity, replaces his deceased employer as the competitor at a jousting competition. Jousting is a pastime only permitted to knights, who are of noble birth, but Thatcher wins and decides to continue his new pursuits. With the help of his two fellow squire friends Wat and Roland (Alan Tudyk and Mark Addy) and none other than the gambling-addicted Geoffrey Chaucer (Paul Bettany), Thatcher has soon adopted a false identity and is winning one joust after another on his way to a championship in London. His victories inspire the affection of a female fan, Jocelyn (Shannyn Sossamon), and the ire of a competitor, Count Adehmar (Rufus Sewell), but Thatcher's ruse is threatened with exposure. A Knight's Tale is the sophomore directorial effort of acclaimed screenwriter Brian Helgeland, who won an Oscar for his work on L.A. Confidential (1997) and debuted behind the camera with the troubled production of Payback (1999). Karl Williams, All Movie Guide

Features

Additional Information

  • DPCI: 058-17-0211
  • ASIN: B002FTHE8A
  • Catalog #: 11300897
  • Item can not be gift wrapped.

Shipping & Policies

Guest Reviews

There are no reviews for this item.
Have any thoughts you'd like to share?

Be the first to write a review

Expert Reviews

The summer of 2001 saw the birth of an unusual new hybrid -- the period film featuring modern-day music, ideas, and catch phrases. In both instances (director Baz Luhrmann's Moulin Rouge [2001] and this medieval fantasy from writer/director Brian Helgeland), the device works. That's probably because both filmmakers fought the powers that be to make it so, relying on the courage of their convictions that they could make it as giddily cool as they envisioned it being. Cool it is, especially in the case of Helgeland's fun-filled frolic, a goofball mishmash of influences ranging from Braveheart (1995) to baseball, Rob Roy (1995) to the rock roll of AM radio in the 1970s. Sure, the sudden, jarring appearance of "the wave" during a jousting tournament or David Bowie's "Golden Years" during a medieval ball requires some rewiring of one's mental circuitry, and there will be those who can't make the required intellectual leap. There may even be many who don't want to spend a feature-length film's running time with their disbelief fully disengaged. What's groundbreaking or fresh in art or entertainment, however, is often pleasing to those expecting the status quo. It's also often a trail mix of familiar elements jumbled into an inventive new combination, and A Knight's Tale meets that basic requirement. Performances here are not really the point, but Heath Ledger, newcomer Shannyn Sossamon, and the glowering Rufus Sewell are perfectly acceptable, cheekbone-blessed leads. The real standout here is Paul Bettany as the naked, addictive, and fiendishly talented Geoffrey Chaucer, a mirthfully kick-in-the-pants comic character similar to the one that made Rhys Ifans a minor star after Notting Hill (1999). Embracing anachronism is an artistic philosophy that isn't likely to work in most cases, and it will doubtlessly be imitated endlessly, and disastrously so. In 2001, however, it was the "new thing" in Hollywood cinema and an enjoyable development in a summer of particularly boring junk. Karl Williams, All Movie Guide