William the Conqueror (film)
William the Conqueror (French: Guillaume, la jeunesse du conquérant, lit. 'William the Young Conqueror') is a 2015 French historical film directed by Fabien Drugeon.[1] The film begins in 1066 as William of Normandy is about to embark from Dives-sur-Mer to conquer England. In the event that he would not return alive, William introduced his son Robert to his loyal barons to receive the ducal throne heritage.
| William the Young Conqueror | |
|---|---|
| Directed by | Fabien Drugeon |
| Written by | Fabien Drugeon |
We then have an extensive flashback. William's father Duke Robert declares William his heir before departing for a pilgrimage to Jerusalem. The barons swear loyalty. However, Robert dies on the journey and William, still a child, has to flee.
We then see a long sequence with William as a fugitive. Finally, as a young man, he persuades the King of France to lend him an army. He wins a crucial battle and becomes Duke.
During the 1066 sections of the film, William tells a friend that it is not the weather that is delaying him. At the end, he gets a messenger from Norway. Presumably this tells him that Harold Hardrada is invading England, which will pull Harold Godwinson north and make the conquest much more likely to succeed.
Cast
- Dan Bronchinson as William of Normandy (French: Guillaume de Normandie), later William the Conqueror
- Jean-Damien Détouillon as 20-year old William of Normandy
- Tiésay Deshayes as young William of Normandy
- Geoffroy Lidvan as Osbern the Steward (French: Osbern de Crépon)
- Eric Rulliat as Ranulf the Viscount (French: Renouf de Briquessard)
- Thomas Debaene as William FitzOsbern (French: Wilhelm Fitz Osbern)
- Pierrick Billard as Gilbert, Count of Brionne (French: Gilbert de Brionne)
References
- Guillaume, la jeunesse du conquérant, Télérama magazine, 7 October 2014. Retrieved 3 May 2021.