The Three Musketeers (1921)
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100% of critics liked it
(7 reviews) -
72% of users liked it
(238 ratings)
Douglas Fairbanks' longest and most elaborate production up to 1921, The Three Musketeers was Fairbanks' first full-blown costume adventure (his modestly produced 1920 The Mark of Zorro was regarded as an extension of his breezy contemporary comedies). Fairbanks assumes the leading role of… More Douglas Fairbanks' longest and most elaborate production up to 1921, The Three Musketeers was Fairbanks' first full-blown costume adventure (his modestly produced 1920 The Mark of Zorro was regarded as an extension of his breezy contemporary comedies). Fairbanks assumes the leading role of D'Artagnan, who after challenging musketeers Athos (Leon Barry), Porthos (George Siegmann) and Aramis (Eugene Pallette--yes, Eugene Pallette) to a duel, joins forces with them in opposition of the scheming Cardinal Richelieu(Nigel De Brulier). Plotting to discredit Queen Anne (Mary McLaren) in the eyes of her husband King Louis XIII (Adolphe Menjou) Richelieu dispatches Milady de Winter (Barbara La Marr) to pilfer the diamond brooch given by Anne to her British lover, the Duke of Buckingham (Thomas Holding). With the help of the lovely Constance (Marguerite de la Motte) D'Artagnan and the Musketeers race against time to retrieve the brooch and save their Queen. The film ends with D'Artagnan emerging victorious, a twinkle in his eye and a smile on his lips; the actual, darker denouement of Dumas' original Three Musketeers would be dramatized in the opening reels of Douglas Fairbanks' valedictory silent film, The Iron Mask (1929). ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
- Directed By
- Fred Niblo
- Written By
- Douglas Fairbanks, Lotta Woods
- Genres
- Classics, Action & Adventure
- In Theaters
- Jan 1, 1921 Wide
- Studio
- United Artists
Critic Reviews
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Steven D. Greydanus, Decent Films Guide
Exuberantly embraces the melodramatic absurdities of Dumas's moral universe [though] Don Q Son of Zorro did better with this kind of sophisticated European intrigue.
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Douglas Pratt, DVDLaser
the essence of the plot- is competently handled
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Dan Jardine, All Movie Guide
A barrelful o' fun--probably the best cinematic adaptation of Dumas' source material.
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Cast
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Douglas Fairbanks
as D'Artagnan
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Léon Bary
as Athos
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George Siegmann
as Porthos
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Eugene Pallette
as Aramis
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Marguerite De La Motte
as Constance Bonacieux
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Boyd Irwin
as De Rocheford
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Thomas Holding
as George Villiers Duke of Buckingham
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Adolphe Menjou
as Louis XIII
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Sidney Franklin
as Monsieur Bonacieux
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Charles Stevens
as Planchet D'Artagnon's Lackey
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Nigel De Brulier
as Cardinal Richelieu
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Willis Robards
as Capt. de Treville
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Lon Poff
as Father Joseph
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Mary MacLaren
as Anne of Austria
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Barbara La Marr
as Milady de Winter
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Charles Belcher
as Bernajoux
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Lon Poer
as Fr.Joseph
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Walt Whitman
as D'Artagnan's Father
- Adolph Menjou