|
|||||||||||||
| Richard Chamberlain | King Louis XIV/Philippe |
| Patrick McGoohan | Fouquet |
| Louis Jourdan | D'Artagnan |
| Jenny Agutter | Louise de la Vallière |
| Ian Holm | Duval |
| Ralph Richardson | Colbert de Voliere |
| Vivien Merchant | Queen Maria Theresa |
| Brenda Bruce | Queen Anna of Austria |
| Esmond Knight | Armand |
| Godfrey Quigley | Baisemeaux |
| Leonardo DiCaprio | King Louis XIV/Philippe |
| Gérard Depardieu | Porthos |
| Jeremy Irons | Father Aramis the Priest |
| John Malkovich | Athos |
| Gabriel Byrne | Capt. D'Artagnan |
| Edward Atterton | Lt. Andre |
| Judith Godreche | Christine Bellefort |
| Hugh Laurie | King's Advisor |
| David Lowe | King's Advisor |
| Anne Parillaud | Queen Mother Anne |
| Peter Sarsgaard | Raoul |
| Brigitte Boucher | Madame Rotund |
| Matthew Jocelyn | Assassin |
| Karine Belly | Wench |
| Emmanuel Guttierez | King's Friend |
| Director | Mike Newell
Randall Wallace |
| Producer | Norman Rosemont
Roy Stevens Russell Smith Randall Wallace |
| Writer | William Bast
Alexandre Dumas père Randall Wallace |
|
|
Alexandre Dumas's classic tale of fraternal squabbling makes a more than satisfactory transition to celluloid with this 1976 made-for-television swashbuckler. Viewers familiar with the more recent Leonardo DiCaprio version may be stymied at first by the non-MTV pace and the rather unhip presence of Richard Chamberlain in the lead role(s). This well-lensed actioner overcomes a somewhat pokey first half to emerge as a terrific adventure, complete with plenty of derring-do, some sharply pointed dialogue, and a wonderful performance by the incomparably malevolent Patrick McGoohan. Rousing fun for burgeoning rapscallions of all ages. Director Mike Newell would later find success in a different genre with Four Weddings and a Funeral. Ian Holm, Louis Jordan, and Ralph Richardson round out the embarrassingly rich supporting cast. --Andrew Wright |
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||