The Arthurian legend has been reinvented many a time. There’s
the courtly romance of fourteenth century France, the Disney’s 1963 Sword and the Stone, and the painfully
crass Camelot from earlier this
year. Merlin is however my favourite
retelling of the tale. It strikes a perfect balance with its tone, making it
suitable for a wide ranging audience. It has laugh-out load moments, daring-do
action scenes, touching romance, and all dressed up in a medieval costume. What
more could you ask from a fantasy
series?
By mid-way through series three though I was concerned that Merlin had become too repetitive. How
many more times could Arthur (Bradley James) rebel against his father, mean old
Uther (Anthony Head)? However after Morgana’s betrayal at the end of the last
series Uther is a broken man, showing a more sympathetic side to his character.
Also with Uther incapable of ruling, at
least momentarily, new storylines have been opened up for this series.
As always the banter and friendship between Arthur and
Merlin (Colin Morgan) were a highlight of the episode. Morgana has finally
grown into her character as chief antagonist, no longer is she simply a panto
baddy who smirks at the camera. I also particularly like what seems to be the
permanence of Sir Lancelot (Santiago Cabrera) in Camelot. His friendship with Merlin,
and his knowledge of Merlin’s true abilities, means there is one more
person concerned with his well being. Whilst other girls might be swooning over
Arthur, all I personally want to do is give Merlin a hug.
The costume department were clearly having a field day
though. There was Sir Percival (Tom Hopper) with his thoroughly dashing and yet
rather impractical sleeveless chainmail. And then there was Agravaine (Nathaniel
Parker) with his entirely black costume crying out his dark intentions to all
around. And of course there is Gwen (Angel Coulby). Has anyone else noticed
that over the years her hair has gotten longer and her dresses that much more fashionable
and form-fitting? But maybe those are requirements when you’re Arthur’s
girlfriend.
All in all the opening episode left me wanting more. (Though
the preview for the next episode did mean that there was not much of a
cliffhanger after all). It set up what looks to be a great series and the
potential for the growth of characters old and new.
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