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IMDbPro

Beau Geste

  • 1926
  • 1h 41min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.0/10
537
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Noah Beery, Ronald Colman, and Ralph Forbes in Beau Geste (1926)
AcciónAventuraDramaGuerra

Michael "Beau" Geste huye de Inglaterra y se une a la Legión Extranjera Francesa. Se reencuentra con sus hermanos en África del Norte, donde enfrentan más peligro de su sádico comandante que... Leer todoMichael "Beau" Geste huye de Inglaterra y se une a la Legión Extranjera Francesa. Se reencuentra con sus hermanos en África del Norte, donde enfrentan más peligro de su sádico comandante que de los rebeldes árabes.Michael "Beau" Geste huye de Inglaterra y se une a la Legión Extranjera Francesa. Se reencuentra con sus hermanos en África del Norte, donde enfrentan más peligro de su sádico comandante que de los rebeldes árabes.

  • Dirección
    • Herbert Brenon
  • Guionistas
    • Herbert Brenon
    • John Russell
    • Paul Schofield
  • Elenco
    • Ronald Colman
    • Neil Hamilton
    • Ralph Forbes
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    7.0/10
    537
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Herbert Brenon
    • Guionistas
      • Herbert Brenon
      • John Russell
      • Paul Schofield
    • Elenco
      • Ronald Colman
      • Neil Hamilton
      • Ralph Forbes
    • 13Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 5Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 5 premios ganados en total

    Fotos33

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    Elenco principal21

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    Ronald Colman
    Ronald Colman
    • Michael 'Beau' Geste
    Neil Hamilton
    Neil Hamilton
    • Digby Geste
    Ralph Forbes
    Ralph Forbes
    • John Geste
    Alice Joyce
    Alice Joyce
    • Lady Patricia Brandon
    Mary Brian
    Mary Brian
    • Isabel Rivers
    Noah Beery
    Noah Beery
    • Sgt. Lejaune
    Norman Trevor
    Norman Trevor
    • Maj. de Beaujolais
    William Powell
    William Powell
    • Boldini
    George Regas
    George Regas
    • Maris
    Bernard Siegel
    Bernard Siegel
    • Schwartz
    Victor McLaglen
    Victor McLaglen
    • Hank
    Donald Stuart
    Donald Stuart
    • Buddy
    Paul McAllister
    • St. Andre
    Redmond Finlay
    • Cordere
    Bhogwan Singh
    Bhogwan Singh
    • Prince Ram Singh
    • (as Ram Singh)
    Mickey McBan
    Mickey McBan
    • John Geste - Younger
    Maurice Murphy
    Maurice Murphy
    • Beau Geste - Younger
    Philippe De Lacy
    Philippe De Lacy
    • Digby Geste - Younger
    • Dirección
      • Herbert Brenon
    • Guionistas
      • Herbert Brenon
      • John Russell
      • Paul Schofield
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios13

    7.0537
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    Opiniones destacadas

    8bkoganbing

    It's A Good Geste

    I'm guessing that if you mention Beau Geste to film fans the 1939 version with Gary Cooper, Robert Preston, and Ray Milland is the one that comes to mind most readily. But this version with Ronald Colman in the title role and Ralph Forbes and Neil Hamilton as the other Geste brothers is the first, the original, and has a whole lot going for it. It holds up well even as a silent film for today's audience. One of the things I liked about it was some of the dialog on screen attributed to Colman's character. As Ronald Colman had one of the great voices in the English speaking world the words he was given fit his heroic English character so well that we came to know when the talkies arrived.

    With only minor variations the story from the 1939 version is what you see here so if you've seen that you know what to expect. The Geste boys are all suspected of stealing a precious family jewel and all enlist in the Foreign Legion to cover up the disgrace of the one they think might have stolen the gem.

    Once there the brothers fall afoul of the sadistic Sergeant Lejaune played by perennial villain Noah Beery. William Powell who was one of Ronald Colman's best friends in Hollywood plays the sneak informer Boldini who learns of the purloined jewel and inflames Beery with the tale. Powell who also had impeccable diction was playing mostly villains due to his swarthy complexion. His career like Colman's was enhanced when talkies came in.

    The film is every bit as exciting as when it was first released in 1926 and holds up very well for today's audiences. All it lacks are the great speaking voices of Colman and Powell.
    10sunlily

    Masterful Silent Classic!

    I was delighted to see Ronald Colman in the first silent that I've had the pleasure to watch him in! The cast is excellent, and the plot device of starting the movie at almost the end of the story, and going back in time to solve the mystery is unusual for the time and well conceived.

    The plot revolves around three brothers, their love for each other, and a missing family jewel called "The Blue Water." The jewel is taken at the beginning of the movie, and Colman's character, the eldest Geste brother, Michael (Beau), is believed to be the culprit. The mystery of who took the priceless jewel and why, is solved as the story slowly unfolds with each brother joining the French Foreign Legion.

    The desert shooting in this film is supposed to be some of the best ever photographed and the director, Herbert Brenon manages the Legionaries and Arabs treks across the desert splendidly! A fine cast with Neil Hamilton (Digby Geste), Ralph Forbes (John Geste), Alice Joyce (Lady Patricia Brandon), Noah Berry (Sgt. Lejaune), and William Powell (Boldini) go all out! This film is silent film making at it's best and rarely misses a beat! It will keep your attention from start to finish and is one of those films that must be watched closely in order not to miss out on the plot development and fine nuances of the characters.

    I haven't yet viewed the remake with Gary Cooper, but it apparently follows almost verbatim with the original, which is the greatest of compliments!
    9malvernp

    The Finest Version of a Timeless Adventure Masterpiece!

    Beau Geste (BG) is a Classic of the Silent Screen honored in its own time as a movie great. It was remade successfully in one particular sound version that also resulted in similar acclaim. Most (but not all) such silent films involved epic stories that benefitted in their re-telling because of Hollywood's technological advances in better cameras, improvements in the use of color and modern achievements in sound fidelity. In the case of BG, the subsequent sound remake directed by William A. Wellman in 1939 is fondly remembered today by many people. However, it closely follows BG in its unique narrative presentation, and does not surpass the acting and set design accomplishments of the original version.

    The list is long of such silent movie classics that were followed by acclaimed remakes. It includes, among others, Ben-Hur (original 1925, remake 1959); Stella Dallas (original also with Ronald Colman 1925, remake 1937); The Ten Commandments (original 1923, remake 1956); The Prisoner of Zenda (original 1913 and 1922, remake also with Ronald Colman 1937); The Man in the Iron Mask (originally titled The Iron Mask 1929, remake 1939); The Thief of Bagdad (original 1924, remake 1940); The Three Musketeers (original 1921, remake 1948); and Disraeli (original 1921 and remake 1929 both with George Arliss). There were other remake versions of these silent film classics, but the ones cited here are the most famous.

    As for BG, it was an achievement then praised by the novel's author, Percival Christopher Wren, when he said that "it couldn't have been cast better." The film cost over one million dollars to make in 1926, which was a phenomenal amount of money at that time. Oscars were not first given out until the following year, but BG did win a Photoplay Gold Medal----then Hollywood's most honored competitive award. Shot on location in the Arizona desert outside Yuma (exactly like the 1939 remake), the filming presented a difficult and challenging experience for all concerned. But the final result produced a bona fide timeless classic that thrills us to this very day. It is one of the greatest action films of all time.

    BG was also a seminal event in the career of Ronald Colman. In it, he perfected his image of the decent, brave and honorable man of valor, whose code of personal behavior allowed him to reach heights of greatness and nobility of character. He would go on to hone this image in numerous subsequent movies, and do so with considerable charm and charisma. While Leslie Howard also developed somewhat similar qualities in many of his own screen roles, Colman could project more physicality in his performances and therefore was probably the more versatile actor of the two.

    Audiences watching BG cannot help but be moved by the power of this film and its rousing narrative. It is not to be missed.
    9BarbaraMcI

    Ronald Colman is "Beau Geste"

    First, the original novel by P.C. Wren is about the most exciting book I've ever read. Though it's generally considered adventure fantasy for adolescent boys, and I was a thirtysomething woman when I got around to reading it, I really couldn't put it down. HOW did all those Legionnaires stand at Fort Zinderneuf? Who stole the Blue Water? And of course I have had a major crush on Ronald Colman since my teens, so I had to buy the movie (on VHS, alas). But I love Gary Cooper, too. Which version to choose? Well, anybody but a Frenchman can join the Foreign Legion, but seeing Cooper and Robert Preston (love him, too) in this very English story just doesn't seem to work. Maybe Cary Grant should have done it.
    Murph-17

    Legionnaires disease

    A well-directed melodrama with a near-flawless cast. Director Herbert Brenon (or his editor) lets the story unfold at a steady but never slow pace, nicely managing the suspense, but giving you perhaps too much time to ponder some of the oddities that crop up in the plot. Why, for instance, when everyone is standing in a room from which a valuable jewel has just been stolen by a culprit who is clearly still present, do they not simply search the room? Why do the three brothers, each separately on the run, condemn themselves to joining the French Foreign Legion (simultaneously, no less!) if all of them know they're not guilty of any great crime and thus consciously ignore their family's desperate financial straits? They could have at least sent some of their Legion pay back home to mother.

    Those Legionnaires got paid a wad of dough because -- in real life, anyhow -- they were brutal, mercenary killers employed by an imperialist power to wipe out Arabs and anybody else who got in its way. Not that the Arabs were such nice guys either but, of course, the film presents all this with the complexity of a cowboys-and-Indians B western. Having your hero join the Legion with no qualms is sort of like having your hero join the Ku Klux Klan, except that the Klan wasn't as efficient a group of racist mass-murderers.

    Absurdities and implausiblities aside, the film holds its grip pretty well, not because of epic elements like mobs of attacking Arabs, shots of marvelously oppressive desert vistas, etc., but because of the unstressed acting amidst all the mayhem and intrigue. I tend to agree with the critic who wrote that, in the 1939 version, Gary Cooper merely played Gary Cooper but that, in the '26 version, Ronald Colman embodied Beau Geste. Everyone else is fine and if the villain is over-the-top, it's certainly forgivable on this occasion.

    There's a lot of bugling in these French Foreign Legion pictures and whoever accompanies this long silent will have to struggle to stay in perfect sync with all the various fanfares, especially a necessary rendition of "Taps" near the climax.

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    • Trivia
      Contrary to reference books on the subject, the film did not have Technicolor inserts according to Technicolor's records. Some Technicolor footage was indeed photographed for the production, but not used in the final print.
    • Citas

      Lady Patricia Brandon: If the sapphire is not returned by morning, I shall be more sorry than I can say - to know that one of you is a common thief!

    • Versiones alternativas
      The running time of Beau Geste (1926) upon initial release was 129 minutes. It was subsequently cut to shorter lengths twice for re-releases. Under the supervision of The Library of Congress, the movie was restored to its original length. The restored version screened at the Museum of Modern Art on August 1, 2025.
    • Conexiones
      Featured in The House That Shadows Built (1931)

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    Preguntas Frecuentes16

    • How long is Beau Geste?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

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    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 25 de agosto de 1926 (Estados Unidos)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idiomas
      • Ninguno
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • Tricolorens hjältar
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Yuma, Arizona, Estados Unidos
    • Productora
      • Paramount Pictures
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 1,708,926
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Tiempo de ejecución
      • 1h 41min(101 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Silent
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.33 : 1

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