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King Ralph

1991

Action / Comedy / Romance

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

Joely Richardson Photo
Joely Richardson as Princess Anna
John Goodman Photo
John Goodman as Ralph
John Hurt Photo
John Hurt as Graves
Julian Glover Photo
Julian Glover as King Gustav
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
769.18 MB
1280*700
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 37 min
P/S 0 / 7
1.42 GB
1904*1040
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 37 min
P/S 1 / 11

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by bkoganbing7 / 10

Royally Amusing

Though this film got trashed in a lot of circles, I rather like it if for no other reasons than it gives Americans some notion of the function of the monarchy in Great Britain.

Sometimes having the head of state and the head of government does have its bad points. Watergate for instance might have not been the gut wrenching experience if in America we were a parliamentary democracy with a royal head of state. Richard Nixon would have been put up for a "no confidence" vote and out he would have been without all the drama.

Drama on the other side of the Atlantic is saved for the Royals. This film might give an American some idea of what the abdication crisis was all about. John Goodman as the American born King has his own Mrs. Simpson.

In fact how he got to the throne is quite the tale. On some grand occasion the extended royal family got together for what looks like a team picture like they take in spring training of the various baseball rosters. Someone left a loose electrical cable dangling on the metal bleachers and the whole lot of them were electrocuted.

Genealogists poured through the Windham family tree and found some member had renounced it all and gone to America. The heir of that forgotten branch is John Goodman, Ralph Jones who does a lounge act in Las Vegas and not in classier joints in Las Vegas.

Of course the free and easy and thoroughly American Goodman doesn't take readily to his new found job. He can't quite comprehend that he has to serve as well as be served. And he has the same problem the Duke of Windsor had when he was briefly Edward VIII. With a lot more excuse since Windsor was brought up in the tradition.

Peter O'Toole as the lord who tries to give him some on the job training and John Hurt who has his own reasons for wanting Goodman to flop both give stand out performances. Best scene the palace ball for Goodman's prospective bride when Goodman does his lounge act.

It's a funny film and in its own way educational. The Duke of Windsor should have seen it. His duty would have been clear.

Reviewed by SnoopyStyle4 / 10

being King is no fun

When the entire British royal family is accidentally electrocuted, a world wide search is launched until they find (*shock) struggling lounge singer Ralph Jones (John Goodman) in Las Vegas. Cedric Willingham (Peter O'Toole) is his secretary. The pompous Percival Graves (John Hurt) is the next in line to the throne and schemes to take over. Ralph falls for shy rookie stripper Miranda (Camille Coduri).

Ralph is not the right character for this. He is too self-assured to be pushed around as the story requires. He should a fun, personable fool. Goodman can do it. Quite frankly, Pauly Shore would do better in this role. It would easier for him to be a fish-out-of-water. He would be dumb enough to be manipulated. The royal arranged marriage is from another century. Instead of being quirky fun, it's ridiculously stupid and Goodman is not playing his role that way. This is a comedy with no real laughs.

Reviewed by CinefanR10 / 10

Who the hell cares about critics? This is great fun!

"King Ralph" was surprisingly entertaining and very funny, actually. However outrageous, implausible, ridiculous the plot, that doesn't matter. It was deliciously over the top to see Peter O'Toole and John Goodman, the most unlikely team ever, provide the spectacle of a cultural clash, to say the least. The movie cheerfully mocks both American and British culture and stereotypes, but it does it rather playfully, without being offensive to anybody. The joke is either on the hamburger and baseball loving Americans, or the stiff conservatory high-class Brits. People who describe this movie as "low-brow" comedy obviously have no idea what that means. This is good quality humor, no crude and tasteless jokes here. The actors are all top-rate and the acting is first class.

Who could have played the majestic, royal British type better than Peter O'Toole? Nobody! He's perfect, graceful and dignified as the King's adviser. John Goodman, on the other hand, is perfect as the average joe who doesn't know or care much about protocol, good manners or politics. John Hurt is another excellent choice to play the part of an evil, unscrupulous aristocrat hung up on power. Hurt obviously enjoyed doing this part and he's very funny. The movie tends to drag when Goodman's girlfriend shows up, but Princess Anna enters the stage to compensate. There are also some unnecessary exaggerations, but I didn't mind. The script is good, the jokes are over the top and performances are great all around. Hilarious stuff!

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