The Last Kingdom

(series)
Trailer
UK, (2015–2022), 42 h 33 min (Length: 51–59 min)

Based on:

Bernard Cornwell (book)

Cast:

Alexander Dreymon, David Dawson, Ian Hart, Millie Brady, Eliza Butterworth, Harry McEntire, Mark Rowley, Emily Cox, Arnas Fedaravicius, Adrian Bouchet (more)
(more professions)

VOD (1)

Seasons(5) / Episodes(46)

Plots(1)

Witness the birth of England as you've never seen in the acclaimed series The Last Kingdom from the makers of Downton Abbey. At the end of the 9th century, many of the separate kingdoms, which we now call England, have fallen in bloody conflict with invading Danes. Against this turbulent backdrop lives our hero, Uhtred (Alexander Dreymon). Born the son of a Saxon nobleman, he is captured by the Danes and raised as one of their own. For many years fate binds him to Alfred (David Dawson), Saxon King of Wessex. Uhtred must fight for Alfred's dream of uniting the kingdoms. Suffering great personal tragedy, Uhtred is torn between the country of his birth and the people of his upbringing. After his father's death, the turbulent reign of the new King Edward threatens Alfred's dream more than ever. When faced with old enemies and fresh heartbreak, Uhtred finds his own fate tied to the future of the nation... Destiny Is All! (Universal Sony Pictures Home Entertainment)

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Reviews of this series by the user Ediebalboa (1)

The Last Kingdom (2015) 

English A straightforward medieval ride where, contrary to current trends, there is no room for any filler with mythology, shallow stories of side characters from the tavern or dragons, undead and other monsters. Amen for that. The Last Kingdom sticks firmly to its protagonist Uhtred, leaving space for others only when their fates move the central plot, or even the whole story. A trivial strategy for today's filmmaking, perhaps, but one that is appropriate as the series progresses, avoiding blind or unfinished storylines, which actually would have been hard, given the excellent source material. The British creators pick the best from all the books and, apart from a rather cheesy introduction, they create their story in Hungarian studios flawlessly. Not so for Series 5, which takes only the bare minimum from the books and history, and its plot veers off in all sorts of directions. Still, this last phase of Uhtred manages to bring the series to a close with many times more grace than the geniuses Benioff & Weiss managed in their time with the messy ending of Game of Thrones. ()