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poster of Cardinal Richelieu
Rating: 7.4/10 by 5 users

Cardinal Richelieu (1935)

The cunning Cardinal Richelieu must save King Louis XIII from treachery within his inner circle.

Directing:
  • Rowland V. Lee
  • Ben Silvey
  • William Forsyth
Writing:
  • Edward George Bulwer-Lytton
  • Cameron Rogers
  • Maude T. Howell
  • W.P. Lipscomb
  • Nunnally Johnson
Stars:
Release Date: Thu, Apr 18, 1935

Rating: 7.4/10 by 5 users

Alternative Title:

Country:
United States of America
Language:
English
Runtime: 01 hour 22 minutes
Budget: $0
Revenue: $0

Plot Keyword: politics, cardinal

George Arliss
Cardinal Richelieu
Cesar Romero
Andre de Pons
Halliwell Hobbes
Father Joseph
Lumsden Hare
Gustavus Adolphus - King of Sweden
Keith Hitchcock
Duke D'Epernon
Murray Kinnell
Duke of Lorraine
Herbert Bunston
Duke of Normandy
Guy Bellis
Duke of Buckingham
Boyd Irwin
Austrian Prime Minister
David Clyde
Inn-Keeper
Charles E. Evans
Old Inn-Keeper
Reginald Sheffield
Richelieu's Outrider
Eddie Dunn
Tradesman
William Worthington
King's Chamberlain
Pat Somerset
King's Captain of Guards
Leo McCabe
Richelieu's Captain of Guards
Jack Carlyle
Richelieu's Second Captain of Guards
Raymond Lawrence
Guard in Corridor
Eric Wilton
Arresting Officer

CinemaSerf

George Arliss is the eponymous red clergyman attempting to control 17th Century France. He is the first minister of the ineffectual Louis XIII and as such, is the object of pretty universal loathing from serfs and nobles alike. He is also, however, remarkably astute and thick-skinned, and will manoeuvre and scheme to advance the cause and safety of his nation. Sadly, though - even with all that to work with, neither director Rowland V. Lee, nor Arliss himself really deliver anything particularly exciting or intriguing. The plotting and counter-plotting is all just a bit shallow, the wordy dialogue neuters the characters quite effectively and the pace of the whole thing lurches rather than flows. It has grand set staging, but that seems to suggest it might make for a better play than a movie and although there are plenty of familiar faces propping him up - Cesar Romero, Edward Arnold and quite a jolly contribution from Maureen O'Sullivan, on the whole I was disappointed by this rather dry, procedural drama.


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