13 out of 17 people found the following review useful:
A colourful but superfluous remake of the 1937 adventure classic, 24 December 2002
Author:
silverwhistle (docm@silverwhistle.free-online.co.uk) from Glasgow, Scotland
'The Prisoner of Zenda' (1952) is a remake - using the same shooting script,
which was in turn adapted from the 1890s stage-play - of the 1937 Ronald
Colman/Douglas Fairbanks jr version. While the colour photography makes
quite an impact, especially with the costumes, sadly Stewart Granger is not
in the Colman league in the dual role of Rudolf Rassendyll and Rudolf V. In
fact, the film seems as unnecessary as the recent remake of 'Psycho' - Yes,
it's in colour, but with a less interesting cast than the original, so why
bother? There was scope for a new film based on Hope's novel, but it needed
to be opened out more, with greater development of some of the subordinate
characters (always a problem in filming a story written in the
first-person).
Stewart Granger was one of the better of the later generation of
swashbuckling stars, but somehow he lacks Colman's dignity as Rassendyll.
Deborah Kerr at least has the merit of having the 'Elphberg red' hair (which
the hero too should have!), and does well enough as the highly idealised
Princess Flavia. Much as I generally like James Mason, he's no substitute
for Douglas Fairbanks jr. Although he brings out the underlying viciousness
of Rupert von Hentzau more effectively than Fairbanks did, he is too old and
rather too austere for the role. Hentzau's deep malevolence is far more
disturbing coming from what appears to be a flippant and charming boy in his
very early 20s. Mason could have been a *wonderful* Duke Michael, although
here - as per the 1937 version - that character was still under-written, and
again cast too old (Robert Douglas).
Probably the most successful piece of casting in this version is Jane Greer
as Antoinette de Mauban, the French courtesan who has attached herself to
Michael. As in 1937 (with Mary Astor), an actress best known for her 'film
noir' roles is ideal in this part, because Antoinette *is* in many respects
an enigmatic, double-crossing 'noir' dame in 19C costume, who must choose
whether to betray her lover in order to save him. Whose side is she really
on? - It's a great, ultimately tragic sub-plot, which could have been given
more weight as a counterpoint to the bittersweet Rassendyll-Flavia romance -
but the antique 1890s-1930s script throws it away.
In conclusion: while this film gains some visual charm from the use of
colour, the 1937 version has the more memorable performances; but neither
quite lives up to the expectations in my imagination, fuelled by the books
with their Charles Gibson plates.
| Plot summary | Ratings | External reviews |
| Plot keywords | Main details | Your user reviews |
| Your vote history |