The Count of Monte-Cristo

1975

Action / Adventure / Drama / History

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Director

Top cast

Donald Pleasence Photo
Donald Pleasence as Danglars
Tony Curtis Photo
Tony Curtis as Fernand Mondego
Richard Chamberlain Photo
Richard Chamberlain as Edmond Dantes
Louis Jourdan Photo
Louis Jourdan as De Villefort
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
949.25 MB
1280*714
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 43 min
P/S 3 / 1
1.72 GB
1920*1072
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 43 min
P/S ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by Hitchcoc8 / 10

A Decent Stripped Down Version

This is a nice introduction to the Dumas story. Chamberlain is very convincing count. The greatest strength are the scenes at the Château D'if and the relationship of Edmund Dantes with the old priest who saves him. This is really quite gut wrenching. I know it's not the responsibility of the writers to explain everything historically, but it would have been good to have a bit of the Bonapartist issues and the turmoil in France. Once Dantes finds the fortune and begins his quest for revenge, things get so short on detail, but that is the price of a two hour effort with commercials thrown in. Chamberlain makes a good swashbuckler. Louis Jordan and Tony Curtis do quite a bit of overacting, but that's OK. It's a big book and others have tried to put the story on screen, but this has always been fun for me.

Reviewed by bkoganbing7 / 10

Death is too good for these guys.

Although he hasn't the presence of Robert Donat in the same role, Richard Chamberlain exudes a nice dose of directed menace at some people who did him dirt in the end of the Napoleonic era.

As the story goes Chamberlain as Edmond Dantes is a first mate on a cargo ship which he brings in to Marseilles after the captain takes ill and dies. The ship made an unscheduled at Elba where the late captain visited Napoleon Bonaparte on the island and took back a sealed note and entrusted said note to an unsuspecting Chamberlain.

Chamberlain trusts the wrong people and gets hustled off to prison without trial. He spends 15 years there before escaping. When he does escape he finds as directed one fabulous fortune.

Enough money to reinvent himself as the Count Of Monte Cristo. The story is proof in the old adage that revenge is a desert best served cold. And in a cold and calculating way he evens the score by collecting enough data on Louis Jourdan, Donald Pleasance and Tony Curtis all of whom are solid pillars of the French government and society.

Interesting the presence of Tony Curtis in the cast. 20 years earlier he would have been Edmond Dantes if the film had been made then. Hedoesn't quite cut it as a bad guy though by now he'd played a few. But not in the swashbuckler genre

Chamberlain loses too, the love of Kate Nelligan the girl he was going to marry when fate intervened. Quite a bit has come between them over the years. Taryn Power of the power acting clan makes a debut as Jourdan's daughter who does not know of her father's duplicity.

This is a decent version of the story with no real happy ending for anyone.

Reviewed by silverscreen8889 / 10

Beautifully Shot , Intelligently-Scripted TV Version of Dumas' Classic

This is a made-for-television version of "Le Comte de Monte Cristo" which I believe qualifies as a masterwork. The feature was directed by David Greene and written by Sidney Carroll. Its basis is the famous adventure novel by Alexandre Duimas, the father. The feel of the piece is clean, to my eyes, the lighting very bright, the colors intense. I found it to be modern without committing in any sense a violation of its own century. Even those unable to understand something being of another age but not 'dated' can probably still enjoy what I regard as a very superior production of this classic story. The cinematography by Aldo Tinti I find to be memorable, as is the lyrical score by Allyn Ferguson. The attractive and varied settings within the production design done by Walter Patriarca as well as the art direction by Andrew Patriarca with Walter Patriarca are very much above-average even for theatrical-release films. Also, Olga Lehmann's costumes help to establish period and mood admirably in my judgment; the French period illustrated with its Empire dresses and fitted gentlemen's clothing photographed very nicely. The story is actually a fairly simple one. Edmond Dantes, a gifted and honest young seafarer has taken command of a ship belonging to his company and brought it home safely after the death of his captain. Betrayed by enemies he never knew he had, he is accused of the captain's death and taken away from the woman he loves, his life, his world and imprisoned for fourteen years. He at first fears he will go mad; then he is found by the Abbe Feria, who was tunneling to escape the island prison where he too has languished, but ended up in Dantes' cell instead. The two become fellow conspirators, and the learned cleric teaches Dantes all that he has missed in life as they work together to regain their freedom. He tells Dantes of a fabulous treasure on the Island of Monte Cristo, that they will be able to share someday. But he dies suddenly, after they have worked three years more; and Dantes barely escapes before the jailers come, with the map to the treasure and their tools. He returns to the cell where the Abbe's body has been sewn into a bag for disposal into the sea. Substituting himself after shifting the Abbe to his own cell, he waits. Thrown into the sea, he uses a knife to escape and survives the fall and near-drowning in good condition. It is his bad fortune to have to swim for hours before he can find so much as a floating log. Then they rescue him and take him in among them, for his knowledge of seamanship and more. He becomes a valued man, and learns that his father has starved to death during his absence. He vows revenge and seizes the means to it--the treasure of Monte Cristo. Recruiting loyal friends among the smugglers, he finds the five-centuries-old treasure. "The world is mine!" he cries. And with that, he becomes "The Count of Monte Cristo," one of the richest men in the world, a man who can have the revenge Edmond Dantes was denied by those whose business should have been justice. Four men are his target, the men who have profited from their evil deed against him. His sweetheart Mercedes has married one of the four and has a son; but even she fails to recognize him when he turns up as the darling of Paris, the most-sought-after man in French society. One by one, ensnaring them through their weakness and their lust for his unearned wealth, he causes them to be ruined or find death or a prison cell. He has become, in Mercedes' words, an 'avenging angel', no longer a man. But he is passionless about his pursuit of justice; it is for the viewer as if the innocent young Dantes were a man who had been done to death and as if he, the Count of Monte Cristo, were his separate champion exacting punishment for the man who is no more. But when he finishes, Mercedes does not see Edmond Dantes in him, only the vengeance seeker. This film is not about the power of wealth, but rather the wealth that power brings; for with cooperation, men ready to invest in one's schemes, men who can be bought or men who follow an opportunity, there is very little one cannot do. The flaw lies in a French society whose power-holders can be bribed and corrupted, not in the man who makes them offers they should refuse. I believe this to be far the best of the story's many versions. The cast is exceptional too for any film. Richard Chamberlain as the young Dantes, the prisoner, the smuggler, the avenger, the man is award caliber; he became "king of the TV mini-series" largely on the strength of this timeless performance. Among the men he seeks are Donald Pleasance, Tony Curtis and Louis Jourdan. As Mercedes, Kate Nelligan is lovely and suffers as well as she always does; her emotional range is admirably suited to the task of both losing Dantes and grieving over her threatened son, long after she has ceased to love her gamecock husband, Curtis. Trevor Howard is powerful and affecting as the Abbe Feria, lacking only enough lines to deserve awards for his work. Among the conspirators, Jourdan is coldly interesting, Pleasance admirably nefarious and Curtis, despite his accent problems, is energetic and intelligent. This is a film that I never miss, and I invite viewers to discover it. It is hard as a diamond, yet passionate, fast-paced and I suggest intensely-interesting at every point in its logical progression.

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