Status
Released
original language
English
Budget
$ 0
Revenue
$ 0
Berengaria, Princess of Navarre
Richard, King of England
Saladin
The Hermit
Alice, Princess of France
Conrad, Marquis of Montferrat
Blondel
Philip the Second, King of France
Sancho, King of Navarre
The Blacksmith
John, Prince of England
Robert, Earl of Leicester
Alan, Richard's Squire
Hugo, Duke of Burgundy
Frederick, Duke of the Germans
Karakush
Monk
Leopold, Duke of Austria
Sverre, the Norse King
Michael, Prince of Russia
William, King of Sicily
Nicholas, Count of Hungary
Duenna
Soldier
Marshal of France
Christian Slave Girl (uncredited)
Written by Geronimo1967 on 2022-06-19
It's probably best to start off by saying that this is most certainly not an history lesson. Cecil B. De Mille has used the third crusade as little more than a template for his grand-scale story of Richard the Lion-heart (an efficient Henry Wilcoxon) as he capitalises on this holy quest as an excuse to avoid marrying the ambitious Princess Alice (Katherine de Mille), sister to co-crusader Philip II of France (C. Henry Gordon). En route to Jerusalem, they must provision in Navarre where the shrewd King Sancho (a rather fun George Barbier) sees an opportunity to offload his beautiful daughter Berengaria (Loretta Young) in return for victualling the army... We know that Richard and Berengaria were really in love, and for the rest of the film De Mille sticks to the script - but that's what rather drags it down. There are plenty of exciting siege and battle scenes around the city of Acre as the Christians attempt to reverse the Saracen battle spoils of the great Saladin (an effectively cast Ian Keith), but each time we return to the smouldering Young and her Rapunzel-like locks - whom, by now, is the object of both men's obsession The director is in his element with the big, set-piece action scenes and the photography from Victor Milner (who also did "Cleopatra" (1934) with de Mille) adds much to the epic-style look of the film, but Wilcoxon and Young don't really present us with an engaging pairing; and any sense of duplicity - particularly involving the conspiring French, is left too peripheral to the smouldering romance to make this as good as it could have been... There is a sterling performance from C. Aubrey Smith as the holy man, released at the beginning by Saladin and who goes on to mobilise the Christian armies to challenge the Islamic horde; and Alan Hale is quite effective in the role of the minstrel. Overall, I really enjoy these derring-do, heroic, adventure films and I did enjoy this - it's just that it could have been more rousing and less of a love story.