Everything we know about the highly anticipated dark fantasy The Green Knight

Starring the dev-astatingly handsome Dev Patel, upcoming fantasy epic The Green Knight has been collecting positive buzz for yonks. Here’s what we can expect (no spoilers!) when the film finally arrives in Australia.

The legend of King Arthur and his various Knights of the Round Table dates back to the Middle Ages—too crusty and old to be protected by modern copyright law. Being in the public domain, this means we can pretty much always expect to see some retread of the epic stories every few years for the rest of our lives.

Then comes along something like The Green Knight, a much-buzzed-about fantasy epic focusing on Arthur’s nephew Sir Gawain. It’s from arthouse director David Lowery, who gives the dev-astatingly handsome Dev Patel a bloody massive axe and sends him on a quest of talking foxes and not-so-jolly green giants.

If that sounds like something you simply must see in order to believe it, you’re in luck: Prime Video has confirmed that The Green Knight will be available for Australian subscribers from October 28. It’s not the ideal big screen experience many locked-down cinephiles would aspire to, but at least we can finally see this anticipated epic, and find out once and for all: just what is the deal with The Green Knight?

Here’s what we know about the 14th-century cinematic reimagining so far, beginning with an environmentalist explainer from Lowery and Patel. It sounds like this ancient tale has some very contemporary, climate conscious fears to tackle.

David Lowery’s last few films, The Old Man and the Gun and A Ghost Story, were both genre-busting festival faves, and we were expecting just as much lush cinematography and oddball narrative from this newest A24 venture. Until coronavirus came along and cancelled The Green Knight‘s premiere at South by Southwest 2020, pushing back the film’s US release.

In the original Arthurian poem and this new film, Sir Gawain (Patel) accepts a duel with the ominous Green Knight (Ralph Ineson). Whoever can behead the big fella with one blow will win his axe, but must receive the same wound exactly one year later. Gawain’s hubristic killing lands him a year of agonising suspense—can he find some fantastical solution to his prophesied beheading, or should he just lay back and take it?

In the trailer below we see friends and foes Alicia Vikander, Barry Keoghan, Joel Edgerton, and Erin Kellyman in sick Middle Ages garb, plus some tantalising scenes of swordplay and skyscraper-sized women.

Before Australian viewers had any chance of seeing The Green Knight, the first feedback from international viewers ranged from confusion to ecstatic praise: focusing on Patel’s heroic lead role, the surprisingly inexpensive cinematography, and the story’s most horny, unforgettable moments.

Currently sitting at a fresh 90% from critics on Rotten Tomatoes, the same site’s audience rating is at a divisive 53%, so it’ll be fascinating to see whether Aussie viewers can vibe with this medieval art flick or not once The Green Knight premieres on Prime Video this October.

A24 films have a sluggish track record in Australian cinemas, with Waves arriving on our shores a full year after its US release, and both The Lighthouse and Midsommar taking way too long to arrive as well.

That’s the best explanation we can give for why it’s taken so long to see The Green Knight, and why Australians sadly may not be able to witness the Middle Ages mayhem on a big screen—but at least, thanks to Prime Video, we’re not left waiting for good news any longer, like poor sexy Sir Gawain.