Late Antiquity/Early Middle Ages (5th To 10th Centuries)
See also: List of films based on Arthurian legendTitle | Release date | Time period | Notes on setting |
---|---|---|---|
King Arthur | 2004 | early 5th century | the Roman withdrawal from Britain and the Battle of Mount Badon |
Hagbard and Signe | 1967 | 5th century | Scandinavia during the Germanic Heroic Age |
Arthur of the Britons | 1972–1973 | 5th century | Britain after the Roman withdrawal |
The Last Legion | 2007 | 476-490 | connecting (in heavily fictionalized fashion) the deposition of the last Roman emperor Romulus Augustus by Odoacer with the Battle of Mount Badon |
The Mists of Avalon | 2001 | late 5th - early 6th centuries | heavily fictionalized story of King Arthur |
Teodora | 1919 | c. 500-548 | Byzantine empress Theodora |
Theodora, Slave Empress | 1954 | c. 500-548 | Byzantine empress Theodora |
Kampf um Rom I | 1968 | 527-565 | Byzantine emperor Justinian I's reign |
Kampf um Rom II | 1969 | 527-565 | Byzantine emperor Justinian I's reign |
Lovespell | 1981 | 6th century | Britain and Ireland- adaptation of the Welsh legend of Tristan and Iseult |
Tristan + Isolde | 2006 | 6th century | Britain and Ireland - adaptation of the Welsh legend of Tristan and Iseult |
Grendel Grendel Grendel | 1981 | 6th century | animated film based on the 1971 novel Grendel, retelling the Anglo-Saxon poem from the monster's perspective |
Grendel | 2007 | 6th century | Denmark in the Germanic Heroic Age - very loose adaptation of the Anglo-Saxon poem of Beowulf |
Beowulf & Grendel | 2005 | 6th century | Denmark in the Germanic Heroic Age - loose adaptation of the Anglo-Saxon poem of Beowulf |
Beowulf | 2007 | 6th century | Denmark in the Germanic Heroic Age - loose adaptation of the Anglo-Saxon poem of Beowulf |
Hamlet | 1964 | 6th century | Denmark in the Germanic Heroic Age - this is a Russian adaptation of the Shakespeare play based on the Danish legend of Amleth |
Prince of Jutland | 1994 | 6th century | Denmark in the Germanic Heroic Age - legend of Amleth from the Danish Gesta Danorum |
Goliath and the Barbarians | 1959 | 568 | the Lombard invasion of Italy |
The Message | 1976 | 570-632 | Arabian Peninsula - the life of Muhammad |
681 AD: The Glory of Khan | 1981 | 632-681 | epic about the fall of Old Great Bulgaria and the creation of modern day Bulgaria; focuses on Kanasubigi Asparuh's life |
Roland the Mighty | 1956 | 778 | Roland, a knight of Charlemagne's court who was killed at the Battle of Roncevaux Pass |
Charlemagne, le prince à cheval | 1993 | 768-800 | Charlemagne's reign up to his coronation as emperor in 800 |
An Ancient Tale: When the Sun Was a God | 2003 | c. 800 | Poland - the death of Popiel and the rise of Piast the Wheelwright |
Attack of the Normans | 1962 | early 9th century | set in England during the Viking Age ("Normans" in the title being used in its original continental sense, meaning "Vikings") |
The Last Viking | 1997 | 9th century | Viking Age |
Pope Joan | 1972 | 9th - 11th century | Fictitious medieval legend of a woman who disguised herself as a man and rose to the status of Pope in the Middle Ages. |
Pope Joan | 2009 | 814-855(?) | Fictitious medieval legend of a woman who disguised herself as a man and rose to the status of Pope in the Middle Ages. |
The Vikings | 1958 | 860s | highly fictionalized account of the death of Ragnar Lodbrok and the subsequent invasion of Northumbria by two of his sons |
Alfred the Great | 1969 | c. 870-899 | England - Alfred the Great, king of Wessex repels the army of Guthrum and begins the unification of England |
The Saxon Chronicles | 2006 | c. 871-899 | England - the reign of Alfred the Great |
A Viking Saga | 2008 | 870s | Russia - the Rus prince Oleg of Novgorod defeats Askold and Dir |
Boris I | 1985 | 852-889 | St. Boris I Michael (first half of the 9th century - 2 May 907), a Bulgarian tzar who imposed Christianity in AD 865 and introduced the new Slavonic alphabets of Glagolitza and Cyrillic in the Kingdom of Bulgaria |
The Conquest | 1996 | 896 | Magyar settlement in Hungary |
When the Raven Flies | 1984 | 897 | Iceland in the Viking Age |
Útlaginn | 1981 | 9th century | Iceland - adaptation of the saga of Gisli Sursson |
Pathfinder | 1987 | c. 900 | Norway - based on a Sami legend |
In the Shadow of the Raven | 1988 | c. 900 | Iceland in the Viking Age |
White Viking | 1991 | c. 900 | Iceland in the Viking Age |
The 13th Warrior | 1999 | 922 | blends elements of the historical account of the travels of Ahmad ibn Fadlan (AD 922), the legend of Beowulf (6th century), and the Kurosawa film Seven Samurai |
The Castilian | 1963 | 930-970 | Ferdinand Gonzalez: an early hero of the Spanish Reconquista |
Gniazdo | 1974 | c. 972 | about Mieszko I of Poland |
The Viking Sagas | 1995 | late 10th, early 11th centuries | Iceland - borrows elements from several Icelandic sagas, most notably Laxdœla saga and Njáls saga |
The Ceremony of Innocence | 1970 | 978-1016 | a fictionalized version of the reign of Æthelred the Unready |
Njálssaga | 2003 | 960-1020 | Iceland - adaptation of Njáls saga |
The Viking | 1928 | 999 or 1000 | Leif Ericson and the expedition to North America |
Valhalla Rising | 2009 | 1000 | Scandinavia and North America in 1000 AD |
Read more about this topic: Historical Films
Famous quotes containing the words late, antiquity, early, middle and/or ages:
“How many wives have been forced by the death of well-intentioned but too protective husbands to face reality late in life, bewildered and frightened because they were strangers to it!”
—Hortense Odlum (1892?)
“Nothing but great antiquity can make graveyards interesting to me. I have no friends there.”
—Henry David Thoreau (18171862)
“When first we faced, and touching showed
How well we knew the early moves ...”
—Philip Larkin (19221986)
“We know what happens to people who stay in the middle of the road. They get run over.”
—Aneurin Bevan (18971960)
“Women are most fascinating between the ages of thirty-five and forty, after they have won a few races and know how to pace themselves. Since few women ever pass forty, maximum fascination can continue indefinitely.”
—Christian Dior (19051957)