Trivia and Quotes
Trivia
Partly intended as a wartime morale-booster for the British. Certain parts of the play were consequently omitted, such as Henry`s hanging of a friend as an example of firm justice.
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The filming of a battle scene was stopped in order for the company to watch while overhead a group of British fighters attacked a formation of German bombers on their way to bomb London. When the real battle passed out of sight, the movie battle resumed filming.
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Because wartime rationing made supplies of metal scarce, all the chain mail armor in the movie was actually made of handknitted grey wool.
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Laurence Olivier was 37 when he tackled this challenging production.
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The government commissioned Olivier to make a film that would prove inspiring to the beleaguered British people who were then suffering through their 5th year of war with Germany.
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Filmed with a budget of $2 million, making it the most expensive British production at the time.
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The majority of the film, including the Battle of Agincourt, was filmed in Ireland where cast and crew could be safe from nightly Luftwaffe raids (Ireland was a neutral country in the Second World War).
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Due to privations brought about by the war, most of the costumes and weaponry were made from clothing scraps and with wood painted silver.
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The most significant cuts to the text - the ones which generally provoke criticism at Henry as a king - were reputedly made at Winston Churchill`s request.
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Due to the absence of trained stunt men Olivier had to do his own stunts as well as showing almost every Irish extra how to do their stunts (this resulted in him suffering many injuries including fractured shoulders).
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As he lies dying, the lines that Falstaff speaks aloud and the ones that he hears in his mind are not from "Henry V". They are from Shakespeare`s "Henry IV: Part II".
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Renee Asherson replaced Vivien Leigh
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John Gielgud asked Olivier to cast him as the Chorus in the film but Olivier declined, offering him the lesser role of the King of France instead. Gielgud turned down the offer.
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Laurence Oliver`s wife Vivian Leigh very much wanted to play Katherine, but David O. Selznick would not let her out of her contract, feeling that the role was much too small for a actress of her cachet. Leigh never forgave Selznick for that and never worked for him again.
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Many of the `casts of thousands` extras were servicemen, and it is said that you can tell the American servicemen as they wear their helmets at a jaunty angle.
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Olivier agreed not to appear in a film for 18 months to encourage this one to attract as large an audience as possible and in return was paid £15,000 tax-free, about £460,000 in today`s money.
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Many of the sets used for scenes in France (not including the battle scenes) are based on medieval illustrated texts such as the "Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry". The producers attempted to recreate the flawed perspectives and stylised architecture, leading to a distinctly unrealistic look to the sets.
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This is the only one of the three Olivier-directed Shakespeare films in which the full title of the play was used in the opening credits.
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The first Technicolor film ever made of a Shakespeare play.
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Final film of Roy Emerton.
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Movie with the longest title to ever receive an Oscar-nomination.
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When Vivien Leigh, originally slated to play Katherine of France, was forced to give up the role, Renée Asherson replaced her because she was exactly the same size as Leigh and therefore the costumes didn`t have to be altered to fit her.
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The only lines in the film not written by Shakespeare are spoken by Pistol at the end of the Boar`s Head scene: "Farewell, farewell, divine Zenocrate/Is it not passing brave to be a king/And ride in triumph through Persepolis!" They are from "Tamburlaine the Great" by Shakespeare`s contemporary, Christopher Marlowe.
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