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Christophe Colomb

Titre original : Christopher Columbus
  • 1949
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 39min
NOTE IMDb
6,0/10
639
MA NOTE
Christophe Colomb (1949)
ActionAventureBiographieDrameL'histoire

Christophe Colomb surmonte l'intrigue à la cour espagnole et convainc la reine Isabella que son projet d'atteindre l'Est en naviguant vers l'ouest est viable.Christophe Colomb surmonte l'intrigue à la cour espagnole et convainc la reine Isabella que son projet d'atteindre l'Est en naviguant vers l'ouest est viable.Christophe Colomb surmonte l'intrigue à la cour espagnole et convainc la reine Isabella que son projet d'atteindre l'Est en naviguant vers l'ouest est viable.

  • Réalisation
    • David MacDonald
  • Scénario
    • Rafael Sabatini
    • Muriel Box
    • Sydney Box
  • Casting principal
    • Fredric March
    • Florence Eldridge
    • Francis L. Sullivan
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,0/10
    639
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • David MacDonald
    • Scénario
      • Rafael Sabatini
      • Muriel Box
      • Sydney Box
    • Casting principal
      • Fredric March
      • Florence Eldridge
      • Francis L. Sullivan
    • 12avis d'utilisateurs
    • 2avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 1 victoire au total

    Photos68

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    Rôles principaux28

    Modifier
    Fredric March
    Fredric March
    • Christopher Columbus
    Florence Eldridge
    Florence Eldridge
    • Queen Isabella
    Francis L. Sullivan
    Francis L. Sullivan
    • Francisco de Bobadilla
    Kathleen Ryan
    Kathleen Ryan
    • Beatriz Enriquez de Arana
    Derek Bond
    Derek Bond
    • Diego de Arana
    Nora Swinburne
    Nora Swinburne
    • Joanna de Torres
    Abraham Sofaer
    Abraham Sofaer
    • Luis de Santangel
    Linden Travers
    Linden Travers
    • Beatriz de Peraza
    James Robertson Justice
    James Robertson Justice
    • Martin Alonso Pinzon
    Dennis Vance
    Dennis Vance
    • Francisco Pinzon
    Richard Aherne
    • Vicente Yañez Pinzon
    Felix Aylmer
    Felix Aylmer
    • Father Perez
    Francis Lister
    Francis Lister
    • King Ferdinand
    Edward Rigby
    Edward Rigby
    • Pedro
    Niall MacGinnis
    Niall MacGinnis
    • Juan de la Cosa
    Ralph Truman
    Ralph Truman
    • Captain
    Ronald Adam
    Ronald Adam
    • Talavera
    Guy Le Feuvre
    • Admiral
    • Réalisation
      • David MacDonald
    • Scénario
      • Rafael Sabatini
      • Muriel Box
      • Sydney Box
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs12

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    Avis à la une

    3malcolmgsw

    Rank should have stuck to making bread

    This dreadfully dull film was one of three great financial failures in the 1940s. London Town and Caesar and Cleopatra being the others. So by 1950 he had a massive overdraft which led to the closing of studios and companies, Gainsborough included. Rank just never had any true feelings for film in the way that say Korda had.

    There are so many questions you can ask about this film. Why choose March for the lead role,he was already over the hill as a star attraction. Why use the peculiar sepia colour to photograph this film. Finally why bother to watch this turgid mess.
    6Doylenf

    Faithful but "flat", uninspired telling of the Columbus adventure...

    I'd always pictured CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS as an adventurous young man, but here he's played by the very stoic FREDRIC MARCH in the prime of middle-age. Why is it March always seemed too old for all of his major roles, beginning with ANTHONY ADVERSE.

    This is a very respectable version of the Columbus story, but a bit plodding and dull when it should come to life with more vigor. There's an almost textbook quality about the script that takes forty-five minutes to set Columbus on his voyage after much confrontational verbal exercises at the Spanish court with Queen Isabella (FLORENCE ELDRIDGE) and FRANCIS L. SULLIVAN as a nobleman who opposes the voyage. Strangely enough, this portion of the film is the most interesting.

    Production values are splendid but there's a muted quality to the color of the TCM print I viewed. FREDRIC MARCH is competent in the title role, but never quite assumes the mantle of the courageous and determined leader of men with his daring new ideas. It's easy to see why his crewmen become skeptical and suspicious midway during the voyage. Their growing doubts are understandable after so many days at sea.

    Summing up: Interesting enough but would have been a more successful film with a more vital performer in the title role rather than the uninspired portrayal of its tired looking leading man whose work here is rather pallid.

    For all the attempts to bring it to life, it remains a "flat" version rather than a fully rounded one.
    7PWNYCNY

    Being an explorer has its challenges.

    Being an explorer can be a tough business, especially if you lack money. This is the theme of this movie. Christopher Columbus is portrayed as a petulant adventurer who has an idea for sale, and is looking for a buyer. After a buyer is found and is expedition launched, his problems only escalate. The problem with the movie is its superficial portrayal of a complex character. The movie seems to gloss over some of the most momentous moments in history. They're mentioned, but that's about all. The geopolitical consequences of Columbus's achievement are barely mentioned. The Spanish court is also treated in a rather offhanded manner. The king and his ministers are portrayed as petulant fools; the only person with depth is Queen Isabella, who takes a liking to Columbus. The movie tells a story but that's about all. It lacks depth and fails to dramatize the truly momentous aspect of Columbus's voyage. Christopher Columbus was a great explorer whose achievement rates a movie of commiserate quality. Even the scenes showing Columbus being arrested fail to fully convey the sense of tragedy and defeat that marked the final years of Columbus's career.
    3planktonrules

    Like all films on Columbus, it's all a lot of hooey.

    As a history teacher, I generally avoid film depictions of Christopher Columbus because they bear little similarity to real life. The biggest problem is that although he became famous, little is actually known about the man--especially before his famed voyages to the New World. So, much of the 'fact' in the film is fiction. In addition, the films also perpetuate myth--stories often retold so many times people just assume it to be true. THe sad fact is that we have no idea what he looked like and aren't even positive about where he was born. When the film begins, it says that during Columbus' time people assumed the world was flat--something practically no sane person at the time thought! They could see that the Earth had a curved horizon and the reason few traveled across the Atlantic had to do with a previous lack of navigational tools as well as it being completely unknown. People just did NOT think they'd fall off the world--a myth perpetuated by a mostly fictional history book by Washington Irving that purported to be a biography of the man.

    Today we are in an age of deconstruction of Columbus. Whereas in 1949, he was practically depicted as super-human, today he's seen as a genocidal maniac. Neither depiction is quite correct. There is a lot to admire as well as dislike about the man--and it's a darn shame that no film I know of even tries to give a balanced account of what we know about this skilled sailor.

    So why, then, did I watch this film? Well, I like Frederic March and think he's a bit underrated as an actor. Even a second-rate film (which this clearly is) with March is worth watching. There are some nice qualities about the film--the costumes and sets are reasonably accurate. As for the acting, it is a bit stilted and dull. Perhaps they talked this way back then, I am no expert on this, but the people seemed a bit too constricted and formal throughout. There were a few exceptions--the jolly fat guy was pretty cool. But even with a few decent performances, nothing can change the fact that the film is wildly inaccurate and rather dull. Plus, it perpetuates the idea that Columbus discovered America--omitting the fact that natives had discovered it first and the Vikings had been there several centuries earlier. Of course, there are several other possible expeditions that MIGHT have made it there before Columbus as well, but there just isn't enough space here to discuss the recent Chinese claim or other ideas that most likely will never be proved.

    By the way, the print shown on Turner Classic Movies is strongly sepia-toned. I am not sure if this was intentional--it might just need restoration!
    7Bunuel1976

    CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS (David MacDonald, 1949) ***

    It is very odd that this prestigious 1949 Technicolor production should emanate from Britain – dealing as it does with the Italian explorer who discovered America, a nation which had to fight the very British monarchy to attain its independence! Perhaps it was bankrolled as a token of appreciation towards the U.S. for having joined the Allied Forces in WWII; if so, I cannot say that it was particularly appreciated at the time as it was a resounding box-office flop. In fact the film is often dismissed as a tedious costumer but, while no classic for sure, I found it to be a well-crafted and engrossing picture buoyed by a good cast and fine production values.

    Since Columbus was 41 when he set sail for The New World, the casting of 52-year old Fredric March to portray him here may seem to have been a strange choice; indeed he is fitted with a most unbecoming white-haired wig for the film's entire duration but one cannot deny the fact that he gives the role his utmost in stature and dignity – after all, Columbus was firstly an inspired cartographer then a swaggering adventurer. Indeed, March's real-life wife Florence Eldridge is also present here as Queen Isabella of Spain who, after the initial but long-winded skepticism, lends a sympathetic ear to Columbus' pleas for funding his exploratory marine enterprise (though what ultimately propels this is pure movie fabrication!). The rest of the cast list is peppered with familiar faces from post-WWII British cinema: Francis L. Sullivan and Linden Travers (as Columbus' major opponent in the Spanish court and his attractive scandalous cousin who tries to ensnare the former); Derek Bond and Niall McGinnis (as Columbus' companion and navigator – his major allies during his tumultuous sea voyage); Felix Aylmer and Abraham Sofaer (as the Queen's former confessor and Chancellor – Columbus' first champions who were instrumental in obtaining him royal favour); James Robertson Justice and Edward Rigby (as the ambitious and ultimately treacherous Captain Pinzon and a perennially grumpy mutineering sailor).

    Needless to say, the producers' aim here was less to instruct than to entertain and, as such it may seem surprising today to find that half of the film's relatively trim 104-minute length is spent in court intrigues that dissipate Columbus' energy but not his spirit. The initial sea voyage that almost ended in mutiny and failure takes up the next quarter of the film while the arrival on land, the meeting with and subsequent colonization of the natives, Columbus' first triumphant return to Spain and his disgraceful second one in chains (at the behest of incoming governor Sullivan) and eventual disillusionment and abandonment by the Spanish crown are crammed into the last quarter of an hour! Although the TCM-sourced print (which cut off rather too abruptly during the end credits!) I watched was hardly pristine, with the colour looking especially insipid, I still managed to enjoy Stephen Dade's cinematography and Arthur Bliss' rousing score.

    For the record, this is the fifth movie about the Italian explorer I have gotten under my belt, following the star-studded eponymous 1985 partly-shot-in-Malta Italian TV mini-series and the 3 disparate but simultaneous cinematic renditions made in time for the 500th anniversary of the historical event: George Pan Cosmatos' CHRISTOPER COLUMBUS: THE DISCOVERY (also partly shot on our shores), Ridley Scott's 1492: THE CONQUEST OF PARADISE and the spoof CARRY ON COLUMBUS (a one-off revival of the popular comedy franchise). Apparently, Anthony Dexter also played him in Irwin Allen's infamous historical charade THE STORY OF MANKIND (1957) and I also have a four-part Italian TV mini-series from 1968 directed by Vittorio Cottafavi and starring Spanish actor Francisco Rabal in my unwatched pile.

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    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

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    • Anecdotes
      Budgeted at a then-very expensive £500,000, J. Arthur Rank was convinced that this would be one of his biggest hits. He was severely hurt by the fact it only recouped £121,000.
    • Gaffes
      In the film, Columbus seems to realize that he never landed in India, whereas in real life, he never realized it. He also talks constantly about having found "new worlds", as if he knew that he had discovered America.
    • Citations

      Father Perez: I see you're a scholar, my son, as well as a traveler.

      Christopher Columbus: Certainly a traveler, Father. I've sailed as far north as Iceland, as far south as Guinea, and eastward to the Golden Horn.

      Father Perez: But that is to have reached the limits of the World.

      Christopher Columbus: Of the known world? Yes, Father, but the actual world... not by a thousand leagues.

      Father Perez: How can you say that - never having seen it?

      Christopher Columbus: Have you ever seen Heaven or Hell?

      Father Perez: We have sound reasons for believing they exist.

      Christopher Columbus: I have sound reasons too.

      Father Perez: What are they?

      Christopher Columbus: The same as yours, Father, and revelations to which I can add cosmography and mathematics.

    • Connexions
      Featured in The Last Cigarette (1999)

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    • How long is Christopher Columbus?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 13 avril 1951 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Royaume-Uni
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Latin
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Christopher Columbus
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Barbades(Christopher Columbus)
    • Sociétés de production
      • Gainsborough Pictures
      • Sydney Box Productions
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

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    • Budget
      • 500 000 £GB (estimé)
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

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    • Durée
      1 heure 39 minutes
    • Mixage
      • B.A.F. Sound System
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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