War is hell, and it’s been that way for a very long time. However, when it comes to moviemaking, many filmmakers have difficulty portraying large scale combat as anything but thrilling. This accidental glorification of collective violence is especially true when it comes to epic tales of historical warfare, with films like Braveheart and even […]
War is hell, and it’s been that way for a very long time. However, when it comes to moviemaking, many filmmakers have difficulty portraying large scale combat as anything but thrilling. This accidental glorification of collective violence is especially true when it comes to epic tales of historical warfare, with films like Braveheart and even Excalibur tending to shy away from the more horrific side of dark age violence.
And as someone who enjoys less glamorized takes on history, today I’d like to look back on Jonathan English’s underappreciated historical action film Ironclad, a 2011 flick that – while not really historically accurate – provides a disturbingly intimate view of a time when combat meant having to look your opponent in the eyes as your cleave their head in half and bathe in their fresh, steaming blood.
Funnily enough, the story of Ironclad begins during the 2008 recession, with the independent production company Mythic attempting to find investors for a big-budget historical epic starring Megan Fox. Of course, large-scale funding was nearly impossible to secure after the market collapse, so the folks at Mythic decided to rework their pitch into a smaller siege story featuring less characters and locations.
Even with a reduced budget, the retitled Ironclad still required nearly 20 executive producers to get the cinematic ball rolling, with most of the $25 million budget going towards the cast as well as the construction of a life-size replica of Rochester castle in southern Wales. In fact, as of 2009, Ironclad was known as the most expensive indie production to ever film in Wales.
While the finished film was marketed as something akin to a feature-length fantasy-metal music video (with a tagline boasting “Heavy Metal Goes Medieval!”), the actual plot is much more nuanced than its distributors would have you believe. Starring Solomon Kane’s James Purefoy as Thomas Marshall, Ironclad follows a disgraced Templar Knight who finds himself in the middle of a brutal conflict between the Barons of England and the cruel King John (Paul Giamatti). Realizing that John and his mercenary army must be stopped before they reach London, our haunted protagonist reluctantly joins a small group of rebels in an action-packed retelling of the real-life siege of Rochester Castle.