When the leper king dies and the warmongers seize power, the inevitable siege begins. The second half of El Reino de los Cielos is a relentless, masterclass in medieval warfare as Balian, now a disgraced knight, must defend Jerusalem against Saladin’s massive army. But Scott is not interested in glorifying the bloodshed. The battles are brutal, chaotic, and exhausting.
That king is Baldwin IV (Edward Norton, magnificent behind a silver mask), the young leper king of Jerusalem. In one of cinema’s most tragic performances, Norton portrays a ruler whose body is rotting but whose soul is pure light. He is the fragile bridge between the warring factions: the zealous Knights Templar, led by the ambitious Guy de Lusignan (Marton Csokas) and the hateful Reynald (Brendan Gleeson), who scream for a holy war; and the Muslim sultan Saladin (Ghassan Massoud), whose honor and pragmatism offer a path to peace. El Reino De Los Cielos Pelicula
When Saladin finally takes the city, Balian negotiates a surrender. He asks the Sultan what Jerusalem is worth. Saladin smiles softly and says: "Nothing... Everything." When the leper king dies and the warmongers
Forget the theatrical cut. Find the Director’s Cut. It is a slow-burning, melancholic epic that asks: If you claim to love God, can you love your enemy? For those who listen, the answer is a thunderous, heartbreaking yes. The battles are brutal, chaotic, and exhausting