Dopo aver trascorso ingiustamente vent'anni in prigione per aver consegnato in buona fede una lettera a lui stata affidata, Edmond Dantes riesce a fuggire per vendicarsi degli uomini avidi c... Leggi tuttoDopo aver trascorso ingiustamente vent'anni in prigione per aver consegnato in buona fede una lettera a lui stata affidata, Edmond Dantes riesce a fuggire per vendicarsi degli uomini avidi che lo hanno fatto incarcerare.Dopo aver trascorso ingiustamente vent'anni in prigione per aver consegnato in buona fede una lettera a lui stata affidata, Edmond Dantes riesce a fuggire per vendicarsi degli uomini avidi che lo hanno fatto incarcerare.
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They truly don't make them like this any more, and after having seen some of the subsequent screen versions, I still don't believe this one has ever been surpassed. I have also read Dumas' novel and would say that except for some minor alterations to the plot, the movie is largely true to the book.
Robert Donat is a dashing Dantes, whose ageing in body and spirit during the course of the movie is utterly believable (but he even improved on his ability to portray a physical and mental journey a few years later, when he made "Goodbye Mr. Chips"). Elissa Landi is a sweet and witty heroine, and the villains are so beautifully characterised (notably Sidney Blackmer's Mondego) that it becomes all the more satisfying when Dantes deals with them according to their own villainous traits.
I particularly enjoyed the intelligent flashes of irony with which the grim story is suffused, such as Dantes' double-speak as he flatters his enemies, at the same time telling them truth which they choose to misunderstand. The script is fantastic, the acting luminous. I feel sorry for those who hesitate to watch black & white classics like this one - they miss out on the very essence of what the art of movie-making and acting really used to be about.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThis is the version that "V" in V per Vendetta (2005) claimed to be his favorite film.
- BlooperDuring the fencing duel between Dantes and Mondego, in one brief shot near the end Sidney Blackmer holds his sword in his left hand instead of his right, which he does in the rest of the scene. This was obviously a shown in reverse as is often done to add footage.
- Citazioni
[last lines]
Albert de Mondego: [to Dantes and Mercedes who are up in the branches of a tree] Can we come up?
Edmond Dantes: Find your own tree.
- Curiosità sui creditiPrologue: "1815--Napoleon had achieved an empire and lost it again. Exhausted by years of revolution and war, France strove to make peace with her neighbors under the rule of King Louis XVIII....while the "Little Corporal," now in exile, reigned over only a few square miles of land--Elba. But the memory of his colorful career still endeared him to the hearts of the people, and his loyal followers were actively conspiring to return him to power."
- Versioni alternativeAlso available in a computer-colorized version.
- ConnessioniFeatured in MGM/UA Home Video Laserdisc Sampler (1990)
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- The Count of Monte Cristo
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Botteghino
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 3.270.000 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 53min(113 min)
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1