In 1648 France, it's the sons (and daughter) of the Three Musketeers to the rescue!In 1648 France, it's the sons (and daughter) of the Three Musketeers to the rescue!In 1648 France, it's the sons (and daughter) of the Three Musketeers to the rescue!
Edmund Breon
- Queen's Chamberlain
- (as Edmond Breon)
Eric Alden
- Guardsman
- (uncredited)
Fred Aldrich
- Executioner
- (uncredited)
Gregg Barton
- Regent's Guardman at Fallen Tree
- (uncredited)
Barry Brooks
- Captain of the Guards
- (uncredited)
Albert Cavens
- Claire's Fencing Instructor
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaAlan Hale Jr. plays the son of Porthos here. His father, Alan Hale, appeared in The Man in the Iron Mask (1939) as an aging Porthos. When that film was remade as The Fifth Musketeer (1979), that role was taken by Hale Jr. In that same movie the role of an aging D'Artagnan was played by Cornel Wilde, this picture's son of D'Artagnan. Also here, the elderly Porthos is played by Moroni Olsen, who played that character in his younger days in the film of the original Dumas novel, The Three Musketeers (1935).
- GoofsThe opening narration mentions the year 1648, implying that Cardinal Richelieu died then, and the loss of his "strong hand holding the country together" was the beginning a period of great instability in France that led to the events depicted in this film. However, he passed away in 1642, leaving 1648 to be interpreted as the year this story takes place. The problem with that is the fact that Queen Anne, whose own death is indicated here, died in 1666 when son Louis XIV was 27 years old and long since reigning on his own, not the prepubescent boy for whom she acted as regent seen here. Said regency ended in 1651, not 1648.
- ConnectionsVersion of The Iron Mask (1909)
Featured review
This movie was (very) vaguely inspired by the fourth part of Dumas ' novel " Le Vicomte De Bragelonne", which mostly dealt with the young Sun King.
For a French ,it's absolutely impossible to take the historical context seriously : it's true that there was trouble all over the land ,caused by the nobles who challenged the king's absolute power : it was called "La Fronde" :it's true that the young King had to escape from Paris and to take refuge in Fontainebleau .In 1648,however,the queen mother ,Anne D'autriche , was not dying : she did not have a heart condition and she died in 1666 of breast cancer.During her regence,she had strong support from her minister Mazarin (not mentioned here,as an user has already pointed out),who,in the wake of Richelieu, ruled the country and paved a reliable way for the absolute monarchy (which began when he died in 1661).And Anne D'Autriche had no daughter but two sons ,Louis and Philippe : the latter was gay.
Let's forget history .Lewis Allen's swashbuckler has plenty of go ,and Cornell Wilde and majestic Maureen O'Hara make an attractive pairing ; the villain ,the ambitious Duc De La Valle ,a fictious character ,could be one of those rebellious aristocrats (the own king's uncle ,Gaston D'Orléans, was part of the Fronde); As the three/four musketeers were getting old, it was only natural to replace them by their sons ;but the best idea is to introduce a girl (Athos' s daughter) Not only Miss O'Hara wields the sword with gusto (she was carefully taught;see her first appearance) but she proved herself more than useful than a man: a beautiful woman can replace a princess, turn into a servant and seduce a roughneck soldier (the scene when she is told off by her would be husband and lovers is much fun to watch).The screenplay is action-packed , the colors are superb , the film is rather short so there's never a dull moment.
A voice over warns us when the movie begins : this is what could have happened in France............ if fate had not decided otherwise.Well ,decidedly implausible ,but a good entertainment is guaranteed for all.
For a French ,it's absolutely impossible to take the historical context seriously : it's true that there was trouble all over the land ,caused by the nobles who challenged the king's absolute power : it was called "La Fronde" :it's true that the young King had to escape from Paris and to take refuge in Fontainebleau .In 1648,however,the queen mother ,Anne D'autriche , was not dying : she did not have a heart condition and she died in 1666 of breast cancer.During her regence,she had strong support from her minister Mazarin (not mentioned here,as an user has already pointed out),who,in the wake of Richelieu, ruled the country and paved a reliable way for the absolute monarchy (which began when he died in 1661).And Anne D'Autriche had no daughter but two sons ,Louis and Philippe : the latter was gay.
Let's forget history .Lewis Allen's swashbuckler has plenty of go ,and Cornell Wilde and majestic Maureen O'Hara make an attractive pairing ; the villain ,the ambitious Duc De La Valle ,a fictious character ,could be one of those rebellious aristocrats (the own king's uncle ,Gaston D'Orléans, was part of the Fronde); As the three/four musketeers were getting old, it was only natural to replace them by their sons ;but the best idea is to introduce a girl (Athos' s daughter) Not only Miss O'Hara wields the sword with gusto (she was carefully taught;see her first appearance) but she proved herself more than useful than a man: a beautiful woman can replace a princess, turn into a servant and seduce a roughneck soldier (the scene when she is told off by her would be husband and lovers is much fun to watch).The screenplay is action-packed , the colors are superb , the film is rather short so there's never a dull moment.
A voice over warns us when the movie begins : this is what could have happened in France............ if fate had not decided otherwise.Well ,decidedly implausible ,but a good entertainment is guaranteed for all.
- ulicknormanowen
- Feb 10, 2020
- Permalink
- How long is At Sword's Point?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime1 hour 21 minutes
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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