Bardelys the Magnificent (1926) Poster

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7/10
The Art Of Wooing,
FerdinandVonGalitzien24 October 2008
It is always a pleasure and a joy for silent film fans ( German aristocrats experience those primal human feelings everyday; coarse people from time to time ) to know that in spite many various 20thcentury misfortunes such as inclement weather, the inexorable passage of time, long haired carelessness and the Azores trio, finally and miraculously some silent nitrates emerge from oblivion hidden in lost vaults.

The last year one of those old nitrates was found in France, an almost intact copy ( lacking reel 3 )of "Bardelys The Magnificent" (1926) directed by Herr King Vidor. The film was superbly restored, fulfilling the missing scenes with stills, providing a great opportunity to almost complete the silent film career of such an important American director, who filmed many silent masterpieces.

"Bardelys The Magnificent" it is not a masterpiece but a very entertaining film, starring John Gilbert and Dame Eleanor Boardman. It tells the story of Herr Bardelys ( John Gilbert ), a ladies' man, irresistible to women and admired by men but Bardelys will have to fight against his evil rival, Chatellerault ( Herr Roy D'Arcy ) for the love of Dame Roxalanne ( Eleanor Boardman ) in a story set in the decadent French court and surroundings.

"Bardelys The Magnificent" is an impeccable work, careful in details but light in the story; it is not exactly a swashbuckler film although it includes some acrobatics and action scenes and there is a scaffold scene filmed from an impossible angle but this is really more of a romantic drama, not surprising given the presence of Herr John Gilbert, the ladies' man par excellence during the 20's in many American movies.

Herr Gilbert plays convincingly his character, an ironic, cynical seducer; at the beginning of the film Bardelys is depicted in a satiric vein as a French dandy but he will suffer many hardships to win Dame Roxalanne heart ( Dame Boardman is charmingly and beautifully photographed by Herr William H. Daniels-obviously, given the fact that she was the director's wife… As this German count pointed out, Bardelys' only purpose is to win Roxalanne and that's what really matters most to Herr Vidor, so consequently the adventures and suffering of our hero are focused on that unrequited love or paradigm of the art of wooing, displayed superbly in a romantic, splendid and famous boat scene ( it was until last year the only surviving scene of "Bardelys The Magnificent" because it was shown in Herr Vidor's "Show People" (1928) ), artfully filmed by Herr Vidor and itself an excellent reason to watch the film.

"Bardelys The Magnificent" is a charming oeuvre, a light piece of work by Herr Vidor, skilfully directed and with the sole purpose of entertaining. Given that the film includes some action, old France and its decadent court and a romantic and classical love story starring two lovely actors, isn't that more than enough?.

And now, if you'll allow me, I must temporarily take my leave because this German Count must attend a magnificent supper.

Herr Graf Ferdinand Von Galitzien http://ferdinandvongalitzien.blogspot.com/
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8/10
Gilbert in his prime as romantic swashbuckler.
st-shot10 November 2010
John Gilbert is in his dashing prime as the great lover in Bardelys the Magnificent. Adept at both swordsmanship and seduction Gilbert intersects the careers of Fairbanks and Flynn with a dash and panache equal to them in their heyday.

In the court of Louis Xlll no one is more gossiped about than the charismatic Bardelys, an insatiable rake who literally has women lining up on his doorstep to be seduced. The fun loving Bardelys delights in deluding the ladies with the same pick-up lines sending each away with the feeling they are that special one. Bardelys enviable talents however draws the enmity of Chatterault (Roy D'Arcy) a recently spurned suitor of the the lovely Roxanne (Eleanor Boardman). In a devious attempt to even things up with both he challenges Bardelys to seduce her sight unseen. What Bardelys expects to be another day at the office, however, turns into passionate love and Chatterault vows revenge on both.

Gilbert is perfect fit as Bardelys. With dark piercing eyes he conveys both a hard to resist charm and noble resolve. In addition to his expressive features Gilbert displays a wily limberness in some action scenes where he does some challenging stunt work. As the venal Chatterault Roy D'Arcy aquiline features bespeaks iniquity. Eleanor Boardman's sedate beauty and restraint as Roxanne brings counterpoint to Gilbert's rakish Bardelys and it's all good chemistry.

Director King Vidor who made a star out of Gilbert in The Big Parade the previous year injects Bardelys with his signature crane and exposition shots to bring grandeur to the court as well as depict the hedonistic existence of the let them eat cake crowd. Dividing the film with ample amounts of action, romance and humor Vidor keeps Bardelys moving and magnificent most of the way.
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8/10
It's interesting to see such a macho and active John Gilbert in this film.
planktonrules12 August 2009
Warning: Spoilers
This film was presumed to be lost to the ravages of time. However, recently most of the film was uncovered and restored. Flicker Alley has just released it on DVD and the product is worth seeing--though far from perfect. First, a portion of the film is missing and this is dealt with by using production stills and intertitle cards. Considering this is a small portion of the movie, this isn't that big a problem and can be overlooked. Second, compared to some other Flicker Alley DVDs, this one is a bit disappointing, as the special features included aren't that special. They aren't bad, but after seeing such a magnificent collection of extras with another recent Flicker Alley release (GARDEN OF EDEN), I was hoping this DVD would be the same. Still, despite these two problems, the DVD is still well worth seeing.

The film is set during the reign of Louis XIII. Bardelys is a nobleman, swashbuckler and lover--much like Don Juan. He is based on the Rafael Sabatini novel, but like all the Sabatini films I have seen based on his books that I have read, the story has been changed quite a bit. Still, it's smashing good.

Bardelys has a fault and that is his pride won't let him back down from any challenge. When his arch-rival challenges Bardelys to either marry an eligible but chaste noblewoman, he accepts--though he is loathe to marry. In a series of events that can only happen in Hollywood, Bardelys' path takes her to this woman and they actually DO fall in love. The problem is that she thinks he's someone else and he is afraid she'll think he won her heart just to win the stupid bet. In the end, everything works out swell and they all live happily ever after.

The film has some exceptional acting, staging and action. I was really surprised late in the film when suddenly the movie looked like a Douglas Fairbanks spectacle. Fairbanks was known for his athleticism and great acrobatics--and in BARDELYS, the action is amazing--though I also think that unlike Fairbanks' films, a stuntman did most of the action in this film. Regardless, it is spectacular and very entertaining. Compared to other silent films of the day, this one compares very well and I heartily recommend it--even with a few minor complaints about the DVD.
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John Gilbert the Magnificent
drednm4 November 2008
I thought this was a great film. It's got everything. There's plenty of tongue-in-cheek humor (as with Sabbatini's MONSIEUR BEAUCAIRE, one of Valentino's more underrated films) and also some terrific action sequences.

John Gilbert and Eleanor Boardman are great together. Roy D'Arcy has another memorable role as the bad guy (see THE MERRY WIDOW). Karl Dane and George K. Arthur provide comic relief (so does Gino Corrado in the opening duel sequence). Lionel Belmore and Emily Fitzroy are solid as the Lavedans. Try to find John Wayne and Lou Costello as extras.

The missing reel (?) seems to leave us without the story of Lesperon (whom Gilbert masquerades as), but the missing footage doesn't ruin the story.

As has been pointed out, the river seen among the willows is lushly romantic and beautifully done and reminds one of scenes from SUNRISE. The escape scene is terrific with great closeups of Gilbert as he swings on tapestries from the castle walls. It would be interesting to know how they shot these scenes.

There are enough comic and action scenes here to dispel the image of John Gilbert as merely some pale and insipid "great lover" of the silent screen. Gilbert was a solid actor who had appeared in around 70 films by 1926. Gilbert did everything: westerns like HELL'S HINGES with William S. Hart, sports films like THE BUSHER with Charles Ray and Colleen Moore, comic roles like the manic hayseed dancer in HEART O' THE HILLS with Mary Pickford. When he finally reached stardom in the early 1920s, Gilbert continued to explore a full range of roles. He was also a writer and director.

BARDELYS THE MAGNIFICENT ranks among Gilbert's best and most entertaining silent films.
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6/10
The Duelling Cavalier
richardchatten13 March 2019
Based on a 1906 novel by Rafael Sabatini and subsequently dismissed as hack work by director King Vidor, 'Bardeleys the Magnificent' was a lost film until 2006, nearly a quarter of a century after Vidor's death.

It's certainly no 'Big Parade', although Eleanor Boardman (who married Vidor the same year it was made) would play the female lead a couple of year's later in Vidor's next major achievement, 'The Crowd', and is here a very attractive if too modern heroine (although that may be what makes her so attractive).

The emphasis is on romance rather than action, although enlivened by a last minute escape from the scaffold obviously based on Fairbanks but embellished (as elsewhere in the film) by Vidor's accomplished use of the camera.

Roy D'Arcy is a marvellous, sneeringly urbane villain who drops out of the film for quite a while; although during his absence an overdressed, baby-faced George K. Arthur enlivens the proceedings as a would-be villain hopelessly not up to the job.
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9/10
Gilbert the Magnificent
joan_freyer29 September 2009
Warning: Spoilers
I just watched this film and it is fantastic! Because Vidor and Gilbert took the ironic tongue in cheek route it comes across as modern. The visuals are fantastic. The action is great too. Gilbert radiates sexy appeal in the first part and he was certainly a star which is why no one sees beyond that. But I would like to point out a later scene...

Gilbert and the girl see a garden shrine and kneel and she promises eternal love and then turns to him as if to say 'your turn buddy!'. He grins (bet won) and starts to swear out a phony line only to realize he can't lie now. Suddenly he realizes he is a cad, a total lying cad. A fake. A terrible man instead of the 'Magnificent' image he always saw himself as being.

Gilbert turns his head away and kneels in total silence and stillness as shame takes over. She goes balistic. He kneels in still and withdrawn shame and the realization what sort of man he really is. She storms away. He still kneels in quiet and now shattering shame, not moving, very quiet. This is good acting.

Gilbert was not just a pretty face of a stupid guy. Gilbert was a film actor who took his job seriously and loved films and believed in films at a time few did. He played characters rather than played his 'star lover persona' and he played cads, bad guys, funny guys, good guys, weak guys, and even implied bisexuals. He did the role. He did not do 'movie star'.

I wish people would rediscover his real talents and see all his films in context to see he did few 'lover boy' films (and this clearly makes the title great lover a inside joke!). Instead Gilbert tried to act in many roles and expand his roles to be taken seriously. Alas he is today remembered as a joke when he was tragically, anything but.

I am glad this film was discovered and restored and put on DVD and I wish his other films would also be put on DVD so the world can rediscover Jack Gilbert. I also recommend the bio Dark Star by his daughter which shows the real man behind the cheap jokes.

J E F
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7/10
Slow to start, but finishes well
wigley14 October 2008
Warning: Spoilers
This film was shown on French television last week, noting that it was the first ever television showing anywhere in the world. A few scenes were missing and had been replaced by still photographs, but this did not detract significantly. Taking into account the age of this film, I found it enjoyable, especially the acting of Eleanor Boardman, somewhat predicable in plot, but with some interesting twists.

As a silent film, the music is crucial to the film, and in this case it was acceptable, but not exceptional.

**** Spoiler **** Probably the best part was towards the end when Bardelys escapes from the gallows, a mixture of Buster Keaton and Errol Flynn, pole-vaulting over the onrushing soldiers, climbing walls with the aid of a pike, and swinging back and forth on convenient tapestries, until dropping in front of King Louis. **** End Spoiler ****

Overall, a film worth watching for any fan of Silent movies, but if you are hoping to see John Wayne you will have to record the movie and play it back a few times - I was unable to spot him.
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10/10
King Vidor makes Bardelys Magnificent for John Gilbert
wes-connors8 January 2011
"In an age of light loves and lively scandals, a certain gentleman of France excelled in the noble art of getting himself talked about," introduces us to womanizing swashbuckler John Gilbert (as Bardelys). When Mr. Gilbert meets beautiful and rich Eleanor Boardman (as Roxalanne), he is dared to settle down and get married, on a bet. However, Gilbert's "rival in fashion and love" Roy D'Arcy (as Chatellerault) is also determined to win Ms. Boardman's hand, on orders from the King...

If "Bardelys the Magnificent" had not been lost for most of the 20th century, it would have built a reputation as a highly regarded and influential classic. The MGM personnel is first class, led by director King Vidor and cameraman William Daniels. Writer Dorothy Farnum gives Rafael Sabatini's story a very witty adaptation. Comic relievers George K. Arthur (the original Mike Myers) and Karl Dane are used well; it was after this film that they teamed up as a successful comic duo.

Gilbert's rambunctious sensuality is at its peak. It may not have been discussed, but Greta Garbo admired this film and had Gilbert do a version of his "Bardelys" character for "Queen Christina" (1933); her relationship with Gilbert has been documented, but she was also close with underrated co-star Boardman and Mr. Daniels, who photographed both films. A great cast and crew doesn't always guarantee high art in motion pictures, but it happens here. Everyone and everything is stupendous.

Some great moments tease along the way to a majestic (approximately five minute long) sequence involving Gilbert's escape from beheading. Don't miss this part (after about 75 minutes of running time), you'll want to play it again. Helping make "Bardelys" magnificent, the "3-D"-like escape sequence is certainly one of Mr. Vidor's greatest accomplishments. Thanks to everyone who worked with Eric Lange, Serge Bromberg and David Shepard in making "Bardelys the Magnificent" available.

********** Bardelys the Magnificent (9/30/26) King Vidor ~ John Gilbert, Eleanor Boardman, Roy D'Arcy, George K. Arthur
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7/10
A little slow, but it has its moments
gbill-7487712 June 2018
John Gilbert and Elenor Boardman make a beautiful pair, and their scene at the lake, boating under willow trees, is romantic and rather steamy for 1926. That scene alone makes the film worth watching, and it's fun to see the dashing Gilbert later make a great escape, scramble up a castle, and engage in sword fights that may remind you of Errol Flynn a decade later. Gilbert seems underrated today given how popular he was in the 1920's, and his personal story - clashing with studio head Louis B. Mayer over his high salary ($250,000 for each of six films), his near marriage to Greta Garbo in what would have been a double ceremony with Boardman and director King Vidor, etc - is fascinating. While the film has its moments, it also trundles along at a slow pace, and the plot is rather mundane, so keep your expectations grounded.
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9/10
The Don Juan Of France
bkoganbing10 January 2010
Bardelys The Magnificent which put John Gilbert in strong competition with Douglas Fairbanks for screen's best silent swashbuckler is based on a novel by Rafael Sabatini who gave us much good material for those action adventure swashbucklers on the silent screen and in sound. We're far more familiar with work like Captain Blood, The Sea Hawk, and The Black Swan. Sad Bardelys The Magnificent never got a sound remake, the role would have fit either Tyrone Power or Errol Flynn perfectly. Especially Flynn because the story has elements of Don Juan which Flynn so successfully brought to the screen.

As the Don Juan of France, Gilbert as Bardelys is tricked into a wager with his court rival Roy D'Arcy that he can't get the hand of a young woman widely known for her virtue in those bawdy times of the court of Louis XIII. Later on through a combination of circumstances Gilbert arrives at Eleanor Boardman's estate incognito in the guise of a rebel to Louis XIII. He woos and wins her and as is usual in these romance stories actually falls for her. But you can already see he's got some real problems to win her.

John Gilbert was as dashing as any of the other noted swashbucklers of the screen. When dialog was given him when talkies started it was in these kind of roles that his voice did not record well and his career took a tumble. But seeing this you have no doubt of why he was considered a great screen lover. Eleanor Boardman is as virtuous as Mary Pickford or Lillian Gish ever were in their films and she wound up marrying the director of Bardelys The Magnificent, King Vidor.

For completists the restoration of Bardelys The Magnificent is of great interest to fans of John Wayne. The Duke no doubt under his real name of Marion Michael Morrison was an extra in this film. But with all the men wearing beards and mustaches as befit the period, I doubt you could spot him in crowd scenes. And Lou Costello probably under his birth name of Louis Cristillo is also an extra.

For Costello this would prove ironical because the actor playing Louis XIII is Arthur Lubin who later became a director of some note and he directed several early Abbott&Costello features, most notably their breakthrough film, Buck Privates.

The action highlight of the screen is John Gilbert's escape from the gallows which rivals anything that Douglas Fairbanks did in his film. There is some really clever use of a pike to aid Gilbert in his escape and I wonder if Gilbert did any of that work himself. No doubt MGM frowned on injuring his rather expensive body with these deeds.

Of course the real beneficiary of this restoration is John Gilbert and the legacy of work did for the big screen. Bardelys The Magnificent is an expertly staged well done piece of cinema.
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7/10
Much if not all of America is dying to know . . .
oscaralbert29 November 2017
Warning: Spoilers
. . . how some alcoholic fop named something like "Gilbert Johnson" could have been given a higher billing in BARDELYS THE MAGNIFICENT than John Wayne? Some might argue that this Mustachioed Bozo is in a few more scenes than "Il Duce." Most will dismiss this point with a "So what?", as Americans are trained from infancy to value Quality over Quantity. Sticklers for trivial details may quibble that The Big Guy's paycheck for BARDELYS THE MAGNIFICENT was made out to "Marion Mitchell Morrison," but who really cares? This Gilbertson Clown struts around during his excess screen time torn between TWO feminine-sounding first names ("Bardelys" and "Rene"), sporting fake facial hair virtually indistinguishable from that of the three or four dozen extras on the set of this film. And speaking of movies, who on Earth would waste their time on a Musketeer flick with NO Musketeers?! (Ten years after Bardelys, "Il Duce" proved that he could play a Musketeer without even having a sword; after all, Yankees don't bring knives to gun fights, do they?)
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8/10
Bardelys the Magnificent review
JoeytheBrit30 June 2020
An entertaining prototype of all those '30s swashbucklers sees an athletic John Gilbert playing the title role of a womanising aristocrat who reluctantly enters into a wager that he can marry a glacial noblewoman within three months. Gilbert's a lot of fun and Eleanor Boardman is the charming subject of his wager (although Dorothy Farnum's screenplay never addresses the fact that Boardman and her family are firmly opposed to Bardelys's close friend, King Louis VIII). Worth watching for the stupendous action sequence in which Gilbert makes a spectacular escape from the gallows (and appears to be doing much of his own stuntwork).
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5/10
More of a poncey romance than a "swashbuckler"
Dashing John Gilbert is a charming rogue in the Court of the Crimson King (or whomever, who cares). After he's caught in the boudouir with the wife of a local nobleman he goes for drinks with the King and some wiseacre bets him his castle that he can't seduce Madame de Eleanor Boardman. That's your setup.

What follows is Gilbert mosly standing about in drawing rooms, trying to seduce Boardman. It's all poncey nonsense. Sure, the leads are beautiful, but they are inert. Gilbert's character isn't a real person, he's a preening caricature. Boardman - wildly effective as the impoverished wife in The Crowd - is so downbeat that it's hard to believe, despite her under-rated beauty - that Gilbert would be spending so much time in her except for that bet he made. She's just not dynamic enough.

Compared to The Crowd, where director King Vidor wowed us with the photography, the story, the pacing, the acting - everything - Bardelys is not so Magnificent in each of those respects.
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The San Francisco Silent Film Festival, David Jeffers for SIFFblog.com
rdjeffers11 July 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Saturday July 11, 12:00pm, The Castro

"I have never known a woman like you, I shall go – but I shall not forget you –"

"—and you will not forget me."

A philandering courtier wages his fortune that he can wed a nobleman's daughter within three months, or lose everything to his rival. While on this clandestine pursuit, Bardelys the Magnificent (John Gilbert) is mistaken for an enemy of King Louis XIII, resulting in his peril and his salvation.

Gilbert is hilarious as the caddish lover of other men's wives, then fiercely heroic in his quest for the lovely Roxalanne (Eleanor Boardman) who is first seen playing coyly with a kitten while rejecting Chatellerault (Roy D'Arcy), the delightfully evil and shifty-eyed villain.

A Fairbanksian swashbuckler in the truest sense, Bardelys the Magnificent profits from the accomplished direction of King Vidor, William Daniels' beautiful camera-work and superlative production values. Peppered with an exhilarating display of fencing from the USC-Uyttenhove era, Bardelys also includes a show-stopping climactic action sequence and one of the most lushly romantic (and erotic) love scenes ever filmed.

Cinema Paradiso on the Jersey Shore

An article published in the New York Times on December 30, 1926 claimed an officer of the East Orange Police department attended a screening of Bardelys the Magnificent following a complaint lodged by a local clergyman, claiming the "boat scene" was indecent. The article went on to explain that the officer disagreed, as did the ruling judge, who had also seen the film. Whether this episode was on the level or pure publicity, the scene in question when viewed today is decidedly "pre-code" and overtly erotic. It is also the most memorable scene in the film.

Hidden among weeping willows at the rivers edge, their boat slowly glides through the water. The lovers embrace in the prone position, as the long branches brush over their bodies. Bardelys smothers Roxalanne with kisses while her eyes roll back in her head.

The postman would never approve.
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8/10
Noblesse oblige.
ulicknormanowen14 June 2021
The way foreign directors treat French history since DW Griffith and Vidor to Sofia Coppola has always been "personal ": King louis XIII appears as a jolly good fellow whereas le cardinal de Richelieu is overshadowed ,duels are not forbidden (whereas Richelieu thought that they were ruining the French aristocracy ,"these who fight (for their country)" ) and the hero is to be hanged (whereas nobles were always beheaded).

But it's true that Louis the Thirteenth (and le cardinal) would fight both reluctant nobles and protestants; there were rebellions among them,predating the Fronde ,during Anne D'Autriche's regency .

Forget history and you 've got a marvelous swashbuckler with plenty of go and plenty of humor : in spite of an occasional dramatic scene (the lovers in the dungeon where the hero waits for his execution) , playing is a bit tongue-in -chick and most of the time it's comic,sometimes even burlesque : the words Bardelys says to all the ladies he seduces ,the lockets with a locks of hair,churned one after another by the servants , the duel ending with a smack on the bottom (with a sword), the final acrobaties around the gallows,so skillfully filmed (spears points around the drifter) , that one almost believes in this implausible escape.

The movie was restored,but there's a long passage missing ,replaced by photographs and snatches of dialogues:the meeting between the hero,en route to the castle of the lady he covets ,and a dying René De Lesperan , a rebel against the king's authority whose name Bardelys usurps .

John Gilbert is a dashing handsome gentilhomme , a womanizer who is never inconsiderate towards his conquests ,noblesse oblige ; Roy D'Arcy is a delightful villain ,who savors his revenge during the trial ,half-closed eyes, refusing to know his former rival ("Chatellerault" is a town in Poitou) and sending him to the scaffold with an incredible pleasure.

Very entertaing ,action-packed , lots of humor and a screenplay full of sudden new developments :who could ask for more?
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9/10
An absolute must-see!
JohnHowardReid3 January 2018
Warning: Spoilers
One of the big discoveries of 2009, Bardelys the Magnificent is nothing short of a 10/10 restoration of the 1926 King Vidor swash-buckler which M-G-M produced on a truly magnificent budget.

(True, the movie is missing a reel, but it is not particularly important and the missing footage is adequately supplied by stills and a clip from the trailer).

John Gilbert makes perfect work of the dashing, self-glorifying hero; while, to the last man, the rest of the players led by super-villainous Roy D'Arcy shine in likewise brilliance.

The only shadow in this otherwise truly luminous ensemble is cast by Eleanor Boardman who plays her Roxallane de Lavedan as a Macy's shop-girl rather than as the "unapproachable" noblewoman demanded by the script.

The movie comes to a truly spectacular action climax, doubtless designed to out-do such energetic Douglas Fairbanks blockbusters as Robin Hood.

(Available on a 10/10 Flicker Alley DVD).
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Highly Entertaining Silent
Michael_Elliott11 February 2010
Bardelys the Magnificent (1926)

*** (out of 4)

Adapted from a Rafael Sabatini novel, this lavish MGM production features John Gilbert as Bardelys, a wife stealing rebel who defies the wishes of the King and just does things his own way. He eventually meets and begins to fall in love with the beautiful Roxalanne de Lavedan (Eleanor Boardman) but the evil Chatellerault (Roy D'Arcy) has his own plans for the lady. This swashbuckling saga was lost for many decades until a print turned up in 2006 and in pretty good shape. There's a small section that is still missing but the restorers just used some scenes from a trailer and a photo recreation to help fill these segments in. This is certainly well worthy of being discovered because this is a rare case where a lost movie turns up to be a major find and a good movie at that. The flick is what I'd call a spoof because I think both Vidor and Gilbert are having fun and making fun of folks like Fairbanks and all their swashbuckling action pictures. Just take a look at a hilarious scene early on where Gilbert is kissing a man's wife when the husband comes in the room screaming at him. Gilbert, calmly, tells him that it's rude to be speaking so loudly and then goes back to kissing his wife. The love story between Gilbert and Boardman is actually pretty good and believable as is the hatred between he and D'Arcy. The ending goes out with a major bang that I won't ruin but some of the stunts here are extremely impressive and especially one where Gilbert must walk up the side of a castle. Gilbert, as expected, is perfect for the role here as I've never seen him so dashing or charming. I'm not sure what type of make up was used by he seems to have a glow around him as he dashing from one scene to the next. Both Boardman and D'Arcy are good as well even though they can never match Gilbert. Vidor does a fine job at keeping the film moving as the pacing is very good as are the action scenes.
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Silent Swashbuckler.
Mozjoukine1 August 2009
Well first of all, M. BEAUCAIRE is Booth Tarkington and not Sabatini but it's still a pleasure to see this as an early entry in the MGM Sabatini cycle, along with a couple of Scaramouches, especially when it had been lost for so long. The copy seems incomplete outside the missing reel. Where is Edward Connelly's Cardinal Richelieu? The subject is not a good match with the talents of King Vidor. La BOHEME is a much better film and it appears perverse to have him do it, when Victor Seastrom, one of the originators and masters of the costume movie was on the MGM pay roll.

Vidor gives it good try and seems to have a nice rapport with the leads. Gilbert was at his peak and radiates star power here and Eleanor Boardman is a nice departure from heroines in ringlets. Their relationship makes the piece agreeable and the action climax, while it is sub Fairbanks, is ingeniously staged, making great use of the lances and having some striking downward shots.

This is an agreeable missing piece in the film history jig saw.
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The 19 Year Old John Wayne
Single-Black-Male2 September 2003
John Wayne made his screen debut in this Rafael Sabatini adaptation titled 'Bardelys the Magnificent'. Sabatini was one of many novelists who was used to bring historical dramas to the big screen mobilising the careers of Errol Flynn and Stewart Granger.
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