A female Borgia is sent out to live up to the family name by killing someone, but falls in love with her intended victim.A female Borgia is sent out to live up to the family name by killing someone, but falls in love with her intended victim.A female Borgia is sent out to live up to the family name by killing someone, but falls in love with her intended victim.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe male lead role of Alfonso D'Este was originally cast with Ray Milland, who had been paired with both leading lady Paulette Goddard and director Mitchell Leisen with great success in Kitty (1945). However John Lund, originally cast as second male lead Cesare Borgia, would replace Milland as D'Este, with Macdonald Carey taking the Cesare Borgia role. According to Carey, Milland had done the wardrobe tests for the D'Este role before his reading of the "mess" of a script caused him to walk off the film, the first time in his career that Milland had refused a role. Paramount suspended Milland for ten weeks, which allowed the actor an enjoyable vacation spent skiing and sailing. Milland would have further cause to refuse Paramount Pictures roles, and would have little enthusiasm for the few further films he did make for the studio before ending his twenty year association with Paramount subsequent to Jamaica Run (1953).
- SoundtracksGive My Love
Written by Jay Livingston, Ray Evans and Troy Sanders
Featured review
What makes this a great film is Paulette Goddard and the costumes. The plot is an interesting travesty on history, and both Lucrezia Borgia and her brother Cesare Borgia are given rather truthful and convincing interpretations by a script, that clearly had the ambition to catch something of the reality of the intrigues of renaissance Italy, succeeding much better than for instance "The Prince of Foxes" of the same year with Orson Welles as Cesare Borgia. But above all, the costumes are impressing, shining in splendour and luxury all the way through, and the music by Hugo Friedhofer adds to the renaissance touch of splendour and drama. The psychological interest of the film is Paulette Goddard's realization of the conversion of Lucrezia Borgia, from as ruthless an opportunist as her brother, to something of an ideal duchess - she devoted her last years almost entirely to welfare and charity and became more famous ultimately for her compassion than for her controversial reputation. There are many charming details as well, the painter, the poets, the ludicruous singer, and John Lund as the duke of Ferrara does his best and comes off all right. Macdonald Carey, though, as Cesare Borgia does even better and is palpably like the real Cesare and makes almost as convincing an interpretation of his character as Paulette Goddard. It would have been a treat indeed to have seen this film in colours. One last remark, Paulette Goddard never smiles throughout the film, being true to her complicated and serious character as twice a widow, but in the last scene she smiles and crowns the film and her performance with exquisite and irresistibly charming light.
Details
- Runtime1 hour 32 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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