Monsieur Beaucaire (1924) Rudolph Valentino (silent)

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Monsieur Beaucaire (1924) Rudolph Valentino (silent) (Size: 685.4 MB)
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Description

Monsieur Beaucaire (1924)



http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0015145/
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Directed by

Sidney Olcott



Writing credits

Booth Tarkington (novel)

Booth Tarkington play &

Evelyn Greenleaf Sutherland writer

Forrest Halsey (writer)

Evelyn Greenleaf Sutherland play



Genre:Drama | Romance



When M. Beaucaire, a handsome barber, catches the Duke of Winterset cheating at gambling, Beaucaire...



Cast

Rudolph Valentino ... Duke de Chartres / Beaucaire

Bebe Daniels ... Princess Henriette

Lois Wilson ... Queen Marie of France

Doris Kenyon ... Lady Mary

Lowell Sherman ... King Louis XV of France

Paulette Duval ... Madame Pompadour

John Davidson ... Richelieu

Oswald Yorke ... Miropoix

Flora Finch ... Duchesse de Montmorency

Louis Waller ... François

Ian Maclaren ... Duke of Winterset

Frank Shannon ... Badger

Templar Powell ... Molyneux

H. Cooper Cliffe ... Beau Nash

Downing Clarke ... Lord Chesterfield

Yvonne Hughes ... Duchesse de Flauhault

Harry Lee ... Voltaire

Florence O'Denishawn ... Colombine

Blanche Craig ... Ball Guest at Bath (uncredited)

Tony D'Algy ... Bit (uncredited)

André Daven ... Duc de Nemours (uncredited)

Brian Donlevy ... Ball Guest at Bath (uncredited)

Nat Pendleton ... Barber (uncredited)



Produced by

Sidney Olcott .... producer



Original Music by

Hugo Riesenfeld



Cinematography by

Harry Fischbeck



Film Editing by

Patricia Rooney



Art Direction by

Natacha Rambova



Costume Design by

Barbier

Natacha Rambova



User Comments (Comment on this title)

1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful.

Taking a Powder, 15 April 2008



Author: wc from Earth



Rudolph Valentino (as Philippe, aka the "Duke de Chartres") is a member of France's 18th century powder set; he and royal cousin Bebe Daniels (as Princess Henriette) are quite a pair, but etiquette gets in the way. So, Mr. Valentino leaves the court of Lowell Sherman (as King Louis XV) and Lois Wilson (as Queen Marie); and, he relocates to Bath, England. There, he assumes the identity of ordinary barber "Monsieur Beaucaire". Valentino enjoys life as a commoner; nonetheless, he quickly assumes the role of a French nobleman, in order to romance Doris Kenyon (as Lady Mary). Eventually, he realizes there's no place like home…



After a two year strike, Rudolph Valentino made "Monsieur Beaucaire" his comeback film. It's an elaborate, confusing, and mannered production. Nevertheless, in Valentino's case, absence did make the hearts of America grow fonder; and, Valentino spent the next two years as the USA's top male Box Office Star. Probably, the position was enhanced due to the continued circulation of the star's previous hits.



Monsieur Beaucaire is a valiant failure. Staid, light and shadow direction by Sidney Olcott, daintily made-up and costumed players, and elaborately designed scenes are featured. The story of a royal assuming the commoner's role is interesting; but, despite the title, Valentino is only briefly seen in the entertaining role of barber. Possibly, the film's focus was lost during the making.



One of Valentino's 1923 song recordings was added to the soundtrack; listen for it when the star sings a serenade, near the film's beginning. A record wasn't released until later, but the song is chronologically correct, herein; thematically, the Valentino recordings more closely fit other films, however. This recording, and Valentino's successful American tour, suggested a Garbo-like success in talking films was possible, had Valentino lived into the sound era.



1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-

Merits inclusion upon any list as a superior film, 29 March 2001



Author: rs from Mountain Mesa, California



Rarely in cinema history has a film provided as much controlled energy as this Rudolph Valentino vehicle, based upon what is probably Booth Tarkington's weakest novel, proving its superiority to most silent works of its time owing to a virtually flawless and lavish production and an intelligent and very witty screenplay. Valentino sings (on the sound track), he dances, he duels, he romances, in this the apogee of his comedic period, and proves to be an authentic cinematic force to conjure with, ably supported throughout the proceedings by an excellent cast and a production department which outdoes itself. The sharp cinematographic landscape presented by director Sidney Olcutt of court intrigue and mores in mid-18th century Paris, London and Bath presents a pleasant flavour of a period when good taste and etiquette overwhelmed the dolors which emerged from the conflicts periodically savaging both France and England.



I Think Valentino played a difficult role very well, 7 November 2005



Author: Rts from United States



This period story is realistic in its courtly manners, affectations, and bizarre make up. Like it or not, that's the way it was. All the men look like fops, but hopefully we do not believe all men in those days were ladylike!! Let us give Rudolph Valentino the praise he deserves in making a difficult role believable. He did an admirable job, and it had to have been uncomfortable and a worry-some role to play given the constant attacks on his masculinity. It took guts. He seemed to be playing some scenes "tougue in cheek" and he smiled throughout. The settings are wonderful, but the story seems bogged down.



Certainly the director could have led the story/play by Booth Tarkington through better contrived scenes where the actors portrayed more interesting situations. Often, they stood in position as if asking "What comes next" They may have well just butted their heads together. It was out of whack in a way hard to describe.



Might another director pulled it off? Maybe. Nazamova knew how to weave a story before your eyes. (I am thinking of Camille) I feel the male actors held up their end of the action. The women were insipid. Valentino was very good. Three cheers, he brought it off. I liked the movie despite my criticism.



Format : AVI

Format/Info : Audio Video Interleave

File size : 685 MiB

Duration : 1h 45mn

Overall bit rate : 909 Kbps



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Format profile : Simple@L3

Format settings, BVOP : No

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Duration : 1h 45mn

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Writing library : ZJMedia MPEG Encoder



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Format version : Version 1

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Duration : 1h 45mn

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Stream size : 96.4 MiB (14%)

Alignment : Split accross interleaves

Interleave, duration : 1000 ms (25.00 video frames)





*Please, be advised, this is a very faded copy, but watchable for avid movie fans*

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Monsieur Beaucaire (1924) Rudolph Valentino (silent)

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