Agrega una trama en tu idiomaIn the 1700s Clive, clerk of the East India Company, transfers and become a soldier. His leadership and gift for manipulation strengthen England's hold over India but his wealth is often thr... Leer todoIn the 1700s Clive, clerk of the East India Company, transfers and become a soldier. His leadership and gift for manipulation strengthen England's hold over India but his wealth is often threatened by the enemies he makes along the way.In the 1700s Clive, clerk of the East India Company, transfers and become a soldier. His leadership and gift for manipulation strengthen England's hold over India but his wealth is often threatened by the enemies he makes along the way.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 2 premios ganados en total
- Gov. Pigot
- (as Montague Love)
Opiniones destacadas
Notice on the garden table his wife has left her laptop pc open during much of the scene. Hahaha....
Ronald Colman is always fun to watch. Loretta Young is beautiful, even if her American accent gets in the way of her performance occasionally. Cesar Romero, Colin Clive & Sir C. Aubrey Smith all have small rolls.
The historical Clive died an opium addict and a suicide at the age of only 49. CLIVE OF INDIA shows us a little of his brilliance and tragedy.
Something very much like that happens to Robert Clive as played by Ronald Colman here. Convinced he has a destiny like Lawrence did, Clive leaves the British East India company clerk job and joins the army where like Ulysses S. Grant he has a talent for war.
War is what he makes and by the end of his career the French who also had imperial ambitions were chased out of India and it was British for almost 200 years. Clive wanted India to be a crown colony, but it was run by the British East India Company who not under any law and away from the monarchy's writ were quite a corrupt outfit. The Indians never got over it.
Colman brings out the fanaticism in Clive. Usually the self assured polished English gentlemen, Colman adds on that with Clive being the self assured man of destiny, but also terribly worried that destiny will pass him by. After the story of this film is concluded, Clive died by his own hand in 1774 pretty much forgotten by the British public who worshipped him at one time.
This film has not been available for years. I'm glad I finally got to see it.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaCo-star Colin Clive was in fact a real-life descendent of Clive of India.
- ErroresThe story begins in 1748, and Robert Clive (Ronald Colman) falls in love with Margaret Maskelyne, when he sees a locket with her photograph, carried by her brother. But such a photograph would not have been possible until at least 100 years later, when the first photographs, known as daguerreotypes, were first introduced.
- Citas
Margaret Maskelyne: You can't go! I've given my life for India! It's taken one of my children! He's dead... dead, and for what?
Robert Clive: Meg - you musntn't excite yourself. Remember your state.
Margaret Maskelyne: What does that matter? What are children to you? You talk of love and one breath of the word 'India' and away it goes!
Robert Clive: Meg, I must keep faith!
- ConexionesFeatured in Biography: Cesar Romero: In a Class by Himself (2000)
- Bandas sonorasDrink to Me Only with Thine Eyes
(uncredited)
Music by R. Melish (1780 ?)
Played often in the score as a love theme
Selecciones populares
Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 34 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1