11 thoughts on “MCM: George I & George II

  1. Normaly George II is a complete idiot on screen. I wondered why he is so childish in “Aristocrats”. He is a minor character in “The Lady and the Bandit” (1951) – where is a plot to overthrough Walpole…
    “The Iron Glove” (1954) is even worse with George II mostly speaking a fake accent and walking around like a puppet.
    With these companions his portrayal in “Aristocrats” is the best.

  2. Small historical note: George II was grandfather to George III, not father. George III’s father was the hated Fredrick!

  3. Those “tartan yoga pants” on Rob Roy are actually trews, and I’m really very impressed than in 1953 anybody at Disney knew, let alone cared, that those are far more authentic for a late 17th-early 18thc Highlander than a kilt! And not badly done, either; they got the garters right.

  4. I’m surprised I’ve never seen “King of the Wind,” I read my copy of the book until the cover fell off. “Aristocrats” is on my to-watch list, but I’m still working my way through Tudor biographies at the moment, so I’ll wait until it all lines up.

  5. PS: The movie with Romy Schneider is complete nonsense and even not funny. I saw it once or twice. The filmmakers invented a story with kids which loved “Robinson Crusoe”. Dafoe’s other works are ignored there and it’s a really stupid shoutout: “Robinson should not die!”. Dafoe is in some trouble, but the kids want to save him. It just makes no sense from any perspective and Romy Schneider is just looking strange in kid’s clothes…

  6. I haven’t seen any of the adaptations except On Stranger Tides (which I barely remember, to be honest). But I did read all about their court in the wonderful book by Lucy Worsley “The Courtiers: The Secret History of Kensington Palace”. I highly recommend it!

  7. I would like to formally request that His Late Majesty King George the First be formally-barred from ‘Man Crush Monday’ status by dint of his extremely cruel treatment of his divorced wife (Including and even after the murder of her lover).

    —-

    On a less serious note, George the Second may be summed up in a single anecdote: with his rather lovely Queen Caroline dying, the King swore he would never marry again.

    The Court being somewhat concerned about this, they told the Queen and Queen Caroline called King George to her deathbed to convey her blessing on him, should he chose to marry again.

    “I could never marry, I could never replace you – I’ll take mistresses!” pledged the gallant king.

    That may actually be the most sweet-hearted and dunderheaded anecdote in the history of the British Royal family.

  8. George I actually appears a bit in ‘Our Flag Means Death’ not the most accurate portrayal and certainly an odd costume though.

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