The Three Musketeers [1973]
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #26862 in DVD
- Released on: 2003-03-17
- Rating: Parental Guidance
- Aspect ratio: 1.78:1
- Number of discs: 1
- Formats: Anamorphic, PAL, Widescreen
- Original language: English
- Number of discs: 1
- Running time: 103 minutes
Editorial Reviews
Special Features
1.78 Wide Screen
16:9 Anamorphic Wide Screen
English
Region 2
Synopsis
Richard Lester's rendition of Alexandre Dumas' classic swashbuckling adventure is a tongue-in-cheek comedy that thumbs its nose at its more serious predecessors. Having divided the story into two separate films, Lester manages to capture some of the more intricate details of book.
The first film features the arrival of D'Artagnan in Paris and his efforts to become a King's Musketeer, just like his father before him. In Paris he encounters three men who quickly become his friends and allies. Together they get entangled in court intrigues, and take up arms against the plotting, conniving Cardinal Richelieu. In the course of duty, they travel to England, where they try to preempt a scandal involving some diamond studs, the Duke of Buckingham and the reputation of the Queen of France.
Customer Reviews
Wonderful film - shame about the version!
This film (and the Four Musketeers) have to be amoungst my favourite films. Richard Lester's direction is wonderful, it looks ravishing, and the performances are excellent, with Reed being particularly good. It is a delight from start to finish.
But frankly, this version is a disappointment. It is little better than seeing it on video, with an OK print (although perfectly watchable). But it is the extras which really let it down. Where are the extras? Contrast this with the US release of both films as a set by Anchor Bay. They have 'The Saga of the Musketeers' - an excellent two part documentary on the films, together with 'The making of the Three Musketeers', trailers, TV & radio spots and a stills/poster gallery. It's not even much more expensive than buying the two Uk DVD's.
I have the US (Region 1) set, and its a delight. The UK releases are never more than OK. The films are wonderful, but frankly we've come to expect more than just the films (excellent though they are) - perhaps Anchor Bay could think about releasing the double version in the UK as well.
A classic telling of a classic story.
Everyone knows the classic story, and it is told with a joy and verve in this film. The times are faithfully recreated, it's obvious the makers had a real passion for the era. So many little period details are clustered on screen you have to watch it many times to get the full enjoyment. The film feels like chaos, background action mixing with foreground, the characters on the fringes getting some classic lines as they watch the musketeers and cardinal's guards demolishing the scenery. The fight scenes are a world away from the clean stylised kung fu based scrapping so prevalent nowadays. Instead the duelling often degenerates into brawls, feeling much more real and human than anything before or since (except possibly for THAT scene in Bridget Jones!).
The stars of the film evoke their characters perfectly, from Faye Dunaway as the duplicitous Milady to Oliver Reed as the tortured Athos (a signature role for Reed). Michael York is perhaps a little old for D'Artangnan, but he carries the passionate naivety wonderfully.
The film is a fabulous blend of comedy and darkness, the two complementing and highlighting each other. It is a perfect adventure film and you should buy it now!
A Swashbuckling Masterpiece - Part 1
I first saw this movie on a Saturday afternoon with my three best friends, thirty years ago. We all wanted to be d'Artagnan, but I guess the closest I came was Planchet...
I have no words to convey how much I love this movie and the follow-up, The Four Musketeers. Filmed back-to-back, they are perhaps the last great big-budget, super-cast adventure movies of the 20th Century. They portray 17th-Century France (and England) in terms far more realistic than Gene Kelly's 1948 production, if not entirely true to Dumas's novel.
Michael York is excellent as the young d'Artagnan, newly arrived in Paris with the expectation of following in his father's footsteps as a King's Musketeer. Along the way he encounters the villainous Comte de Rochefort (Christopher Lee), the musketeers Athos (Oliver Reed in possibly his best role), Porthos (the excellent Frank Finlay) and Aramis (a superbly tongue-in-cheek Richard Chamberlain) and most notably the manipulative Cardinal Richelieu (Charlton Heston) and finds himself emroiled in a plot to disgrace the Queen of France involving the Cardinal's agent, Milady de Winter (Faye Dunaway).
With the assistance of his friends and allies, including his loyal and long-suffering servant, Planchet (the late Roy Kinnear) and mistress Constance (Raquel Welch in a perceptive comedic role), d'Artagnan embarks on a mission to retrieve the diamond studs from the Queen's lover, the Duke of Buckingham, and save the Queen's honour and that of France.
The resulting story by George MacDonald Fraser is, quite simply, a rollicking adventure (never thought I'd use that expression) that no-one should miss.
Latterday remakes such as Disney's Kiefer Sutherland - Charlie Sheen effort cannot hold so much as a match, let alone a candle to this epic.
I've waited since the advent of DVD for these movies to appear - extra features or not, they should be part of every collection.
Buy the movies, then read the book - I guarantee you'll be hooked...

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