Madame Du Barry (1934) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
10 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
6/10
A bit silly, but worth seeing for del Rio
gbill-7487725 August 2018
"Who?" "Something extraordinary, my sire, and I've invited her to supper at the palace; a little party with the Polish nobleman." "Something extraordinary, eh?" "To see her sire, is to appreciate what I sacrifice for my king." "I suppose so. Pretty?" "Divinely so." "Witty?" "Just enough." "Her figure?" "Just right." "Her age?" "Just perfect." "18 or 30?" "Both, your majesty. She can look either." "A lady?" "As you prefer, sire." "And this is all one woman?" "And all woman, on the word of a Richelieu."

And so the Duc de Richelieu (Osgood Perkins) provides King Louis XV (Reginald Owen) with the last mistress of his life, Madame du Barry (Dolores del Río). You see, the King has grown tired of going to his "Deer Park", which has a bevy of young women all thronging to get, uh, further acquainted with him, but also have ulterior motives. Madame du Barry quickly wins his heart, but with her extravagant ways, also engenders the ire and envy of various members of the royal circle. She maintains her position, but is eventually challenged by Marie Antoinette (Anita Louise), brought from Austria to wed the Dauphin (Maynard Holmes), who will eventually become Louis XVI.

The film is based on historical characters, but its tone is to play up the comedic and naughty bits, and not necessarily to maintain its accuracy. It starts strong and it gets the opulence of the period right, and I have to say, del Río alone makes the film interesting to me. She does reasonably well, doling out lines like this double-entendre to the question about her outrageous demands.

"Madame, what are you trying to do to France?" "Just what it's doing to me."

One of her demands is to have sleigh ride in the summertime, which is then artificially created by the King's men with "all the sugar in Paris", of course while the poor suffer. There are aspects of the film that seem silly, and both Louis XV and Louis XVI appear far too clownish, but maybe there is a grain of truth in this about the 18th century royalty, and what would help usher in the age of revolution.

It's made clear that the King's infatuation is based on Madame du Barry's sexual charm, and how she beguiles him through variety. As one character puts it: "She's something new every day. With the wisdom of the gutter, she's a thousand women. ... Can't you see how she changes every day? Her dress, her manners, her talk, her face, from hour to hour - now an innocent child, now siren, now saint... laughing, storming, petting, teasing ... a duchess in the morning, a milkmaid at noon, and a strumpet at night."

I don't think we really see this variety in del Río's performance, however, or seduction which feels real. We do see her wearing a nightgown when presented to the court, as her way of standing up for herself when someone has her wig and gown stolen, but unfortunately, as the film plays out, it begins to lose some of its sizzle and steam. I read later that the film was originally intended to be more bawdy, but it became the target of those enforcing the nascent production code, and quite a bit of its content was censored. A scene with the young maidens dancing in diaphanous dresses in front of the King and his son survived, but it's all pretty tame. That's a shame, but it's still worth watching for del Río.
5 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Naughty, naughty.
pronker29 May 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Enjoyably risqué and loaded with décor, this movie sails through an interesting plot filled with French bedroom farce material. Reginald Owen is spoiled and oddly prescient about his place in history, as "next to last" King of France. He's needing his grandson to step up his game from repairing gadgets to repairing the dynasty and Grandson needs great boosting in the ego department. Owen does not. He's smitten with Du Barry, whose initial scene features a winsome foot most of all, followed by a smirk from Del Rio as she lounges after entertaining her lover while he dresses after their encounter. She's on the way up and as she uses all her wiles on both her lover, who passes her along to his king, and the king, she comes across as suitably fiery.

There are cat fights among the women, outrageous demands for a snowfall in summer, and court intrigue involving Du Barry's enemy, Verree Teasdale, superb as is Owen. Jory I couldn't believe as a romance of Du Barry's, although he sounded patriotic enough wanting his country not to go to war for specious reasons. Del Rio is lovely to look at in sweeping gowns over panniers, and her gauzy near nude scene is memorable. What I took away is numerous chuckles over the double entendres, admiration for Owen's performance as ribald Louis, and appreciation for the wedding night scene of young Louis and Marie Antoinette, couched as it was in teen innocence.
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
See Through Del Rio
bcrumpacker9 June 2006
Warning: Spoilers
This ran recently on TCM, but is otherwise hard to find. Worth watching, chiefly to see slender, graceful Dolores Del Rio flit around, on one occasion in a back lit see through gown with nothing underneath, while she chirps away in a unique, but credible, Mexican/French accent. Dolores wasn't the first manic pixie dream girl, but she is one of the best.

Her saucy behavior as the King's mistress includes singing this mischievous gem: "King Louis and his fifteen thousand men/Had nothing to do one summer's night, so they DID IT again and again!"

The lavish sets and fine acting display the extravagant corruption of King Louis XV's court, and perhaps, the extravagant corruption of the wealthy and Hollywood in 1934 as well. The director has a light touch, creating a screwball mood. It all adds up to a surprisingly sophisticated film, deserving restoration and colorization. BC
8 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Lavish Movie
fsilva27 June 2004
This wonderful film seemed to be more "MGM" than "Warner Brothers", because the period detail and lavishness of the clothes, sets and furniture is really great.

You can see & tell this lovely movie, one of the last "would-have-been" Pre-Codes, was badly "butchered" by the stronger censorship which was enforced by the Hays's-Breen Office, while it was being filmed?, because the holes in the plot MUST be due to an important "amount" of cuts.

In spite that the title role belongs to wondrously beautiful Dolores del Río, yet to reach higher acting ranks in her own native country (Mexico) in Emilio Fernandez's masterpieces "María Candelaria", "Bugambilia", et al, who does a very good job, as the mischievous "Comtesse Jeannette DuBarry", I feel that the film is almost stolen from her by reliable and funny Reginald Owen as the lecherous old King Louis XV, one of the all time great character actors.

This film is not really and historical/"pseudo-historical" drama, but more a comedy of sorts, with the Versailles Court as the back scenery, for all kinds of funny intrigues.

Anita Louise is pretty and sweetly "spoiled" as the young Marie Antoinette (this actress excelled in period stuff...she later acted in Warner's 1935 "A Midsummer's Night Dream" and "The Sisters" with Bette Davis, she "went again" to the XVIIIth Century France, this time to impersonate Marie Antoinette's doomed best friend, "La Princesse de Lamballe", in the sumptuous 1938 Shearer vehicle; and yet again, I remember her fondly in the highly enjoyable 1940's frolic "The Bandit of Sherwood Forest", opposite Cornel Wilde).

The rest of the supporting cast is uniformly very good, especially the players who impersonate the Dauphin (the future Louis XVI) and the Duke of Richelieu. And those three daughters of the King ("Mesdames"), are a joy to behold!

A Picture that deserves being watched.
17 out of 18 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Probably the only film where the first shot of the leading lady is her foot.
mark.waltz8 June 2020
Warning: Spoilers
This is a nice fictional account of the story of Madame Du Barry who in the court of Louis XV stirred up a lot of scandal and apparently had a lot of fun doing it. This is a rare leading role for character actor Reginald Owen who's only other ones were as Watson in an early "Sherlock Holmes" film and Ebenezer Scrooge. He had earlier played Louis XV opposite George Arliss as "Voltaire", and seems to be having a lot of fun playing with the beautiful Dolores Del Rio who is captivating in the title role. Louis is enthralled by the fact that she claims to think of him simply as a man and not the king, and his vain demeanor believes her.

Delightfully decadent, this is a nice companion piece to the same year's "The Scarlet Empress" where Joseph Von Sternberg went overboard in creating a gauche royal court for the life of Catherine the Great. However, where the art direction of that film was completely over-the-top in its tackiness, this is a little classier and indeed represents what you could imagine the French court looking like. Before long, the whole court is talking, and thanks to the scheming countess Verree Teasdale, advisers such as Victor Jory and Osgood Perkins become determined to get rid of her.

"You're losing your kingdom sir.", Jory tells the king who responds, "Perhaps, but I am having a lot of fun doing it." That pretty much sums up the attitude of this historical epic with lots of elements of comedy attached. The Ensemble of this film is outstanding with Teasdale particularly memorable as a character very similar to Glenn Close's in "Dangerous Liaisons" Helen Lowell is very funny as an aging countess. Maynard Holmes, as the future Louis XVI, gets an ironic symbol when he has his head stuck inside a clock. For his future spouse, Marie Antoinette, Anita Louise is given the part. Here, the dauphin is a combination of Nero of Rome and Peter III of Russia, as played by Sam Jaffe in "The Scarlet Empress".

My only fault with this film is that there is not really a strong plot line. The court schemes against Du Barry as she flirts with the king, preparations for various events occur, Du Barry tries to intrude, she is snubbed, and then more of the same. However, there is enough distraction with the sets and costumes and props, and the film doesn't overstay its welcome at only 80 minutes. Young Jesse Scott is an adorable little scene-stealer as the little black boy who is Del Rio's servant. The scene where he orders the uppity Arthur Treacher around is an absolute classic. Considering the time that this is set in, it is a shame that is is totally court bound so you do not see the plight of the poor while the decadence of the Royal Court increases.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Fine - And Funny - Historical Drama
Ron Oliver4 August 2000
MADAME DU BARRY, a wanton, vivacious young woman, catches the eye & the heart of the aging Louis XV and quickly becomes his mistress. Through guile & intelligence, she soon finds herself the most powerful woman in France.

Dolores Del Rio shines in this funny, lavish & sadly neglected film. Her Mexican accent is more than compensated for by her fiery beauty & fine acting. She is perfectly matched by Reginald Owen as Louis, in one of his finest roles, somewhat ribald & ridiculously in love. An odd cinematic couple they may be, but they are never less than entertaining.

An excellent cast supports them: Maynard Holmes & Anita Louise as the childish Dauphin & strong-minded Marie Antoinette; Victor Jory, Osgood Perkins, Verree Teasdale, Henry O'Neill & Ferdinand Gottschalk as sundry court officials & hangers-on; Dorothy Tree, Helen Howell & Joan Wheeler as Louis' spiteful daughters; Halliwell Hobbes as the English Ambassador; and Arthur Treacher as the snooty Master of the Bedchamber.

Movie mavens will spot, in uncredited roles, Doris Lloyd as the madam of the royal brothel; and Robert Greig, as Louis' chef, who shares a hilarious omelet-making scene with Reginald Owen.

Curiously, the film takes great pains in making the Dauphin & Marie Antoinette into sympathetic figures, especially during their bizarre wedding night sequence, only to turn them into villains in the very last scene.

Warner Bros. must have spent a pretty penny on this film - and it shows. Its pre-Production Code status is also very evident from the somewhat salacious content & dialogue.

What really happened to Marie Jeanne Bécu, Comtesse Du Barry, after the death of Louis XV in 1774? She retired to a life of luxury in her private château and kept up a schedule of intrigues & dalliances throughout the reign of Louis XVI. With the outbreak of the Revolution, Du Barry escaped to England in 1793. Foolishly, she returned to France & was arrested on charges of conspiracy against the New Order. Du Barry had her appointment with Madame Guillotine on December 8, 1793. She was 50 years old.
19 out of 19 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Looks good but that's about all...sort of like plastic fruit.
planktonrules16 February 2010
I've noticed that this film has been referred to as a "Pre-Code Film", though this is not the case. The strengthened Production Code was enacted as of July, 1934 and this film was not released until October, 1934. So, its plot with heavily implied sex was an apparent attempt to flaunt the code--and as a result, it was condemned by the Catholic Legion of Decency--hurting its box office appeal to most Catholics.

As for my review, something you might want to keep in mind is that I am not a big fan of costume dramas. I find that all too often, the films look nice with all the lovely period dress BUT also tend to be rather sterile and dull--though of course, there are some exceptions. Back in the 1930s, they were rather popular--though in recent decades they've become rather rare--showing that perhaps my taste and the public's in general aren't too far apart here.

This film is about the last mistress of King Louis XV of France. For the most part, she dressed in the finest clothes and had her every whim catered to--which makes me wonder why they'd make such a film. After all, if she was a spoiled and vacuous whore (I'm definitely cutting to the heart of the matter), why is this so interesting as to merit a film? In other words, would the audience of the Depression even care about such a worthless individual? I know I sure didn't.

Sadly, the most interesting things about this infamous lady were her final days--which are not even addressed in the movie. Apparently, the people of the new French Republic also didn't care much for her and her extravagant lifestyle, so they had her beheaded. Considering how she lived while people starved, I say good riddance! And, with my attitude, you could assume I was not a big fan of this bloated costume drama or absolute monarchies! As for the film, Delores Del Rio runs around in nice gowns, acts snippy and childish and gets in a cat fight with the future queen, Marie Antoinette. Miss Del Rio's performance is very broad and it's hard to imagine her capturing anyone's heart as she doesn't exactly exude "sex appeal". As my daughter so eloquently pointed out "she's so flat!"---um, yes, I suppose that, too, is true but more importantly, she looked nothing like the surviving portraits of this trollop.

As for the king, Louis XV, the movie seemed to portray him rather accurately. Reginald Owen was about the right age, puffy and a bit of an incompetent given to his vices...in other words, he WAS Louis. His snippy ways with his ministers and too much attention to his affairs did characterize the latter years of his reign.

As for Marie Antoinette, I doubt if she continually screamed "I am Marie Antoinette of Austria!"--I THINK everyone around her already was well aware of this! She, like her husband (Louis XVI) and Madame Du Barry, seemed more like caricatures--one-dimensional and dull. I am sure these people had personalities--for good and for bad and were not much like the film portrays them.

Overall, the film looked good but didn't have much sense of time perspective. Apparently, Du Barry and the King were "best friends" for some time--though in this film, it looks like they'd only been lovers for a few days, weeks or perhaps months. Too sketchy to be of interest to history teachers like myself and probably too dull to anyone else.

By the way, in the final scene between Du Barry and Louis XV, the choice of music was odd. Why did they choose Beethoven...a German composer? Plus, this piece ("Pathetique") wasn't even written until well after Louis became worm chow.
8 out of 24 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Dolores Del Rio as Madame du Barry WOW
jaybob14 May 2003
I just saw this delightful 1934 film on TCM, mainly because I always enjoyed the star Dolores Del Rio. Story wise this is not historically accurate as our heroine was a schemeing vixen & paramour of Louis XV of France. This film is more of a comedy than history. Miss Del Rio was one of the most beautiful of all actresses of the time & a reasonably good actress. Reginald Owen A leading actor of the era plays King Louis XV superbly. Anita Louise is very good as Marie Antoinette, The queen was a teen then as well as the Dauphin who later becomes Louis XVI. The actor who plays him was superb,The dauphin was only 16 when he met Marie (who was 15), They definitly seem the ages. The sets & costumes are excellent. In the thirties all films were made on the studio lot.(Warner Bros.) They had real craftsmen back then. who created Palaces & gardens for next to nothing.

If you want to spend an enjoyable 80 minutes, catch this film I am glad I saw it.

rating *** 88 points/100 IMDb 8
20 out of 21 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Pre-Code Warner's Costume Epic With Pizzaz
Handlinghandel16 May 2003
Dolores del del Rio is marvelous in this witty, ribald movie. When she's not onscreen, it sags.

The music, taken from the great composers such as Mozart, is delightful and appropriate.

Anita Louise is a very unlike Marrie Antoinette; but the show is all del Rio's. And it is, as such, a joy.
9 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Would every grain of sugar available in 18th Century Paris . . .
oscaralbert22 August 2020
Warning: Spoilers
. . . be enough to accommodate a half-mile long "sleigh ride" in the middle of August? This is the main question asked during MADAME DU BARRY, released by the always eponymous Warner Bros. during the apex of America's First Great Depression to warn the USA of the Coming People's Deluge against the Callous Conspicuous Consumption of the perfidious Pachyderm Party"s Fat Cat One Per Center Traitors. Within the context of this film, the answer to this seminal query seems to be that such rough sledding results in nationwide shortages (analogous to the bath tissue, hand sanitizer, disinfectant wipes, meat, flour, yeast and other famines plaguing our U.S. Homeland in recent months), leading to an inevitable angry campaign to decapitate all the Fat Cats, as happened in Real Life France, where this movie's title character lost her noggin on Dec. 8, 1793.
0 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed