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Cartouche
Cartouche
Actors: Jean-Paul Belmondo, Claudia Cardinale, Jess Hahn, Marcel Dalio, Jean Rochefort
Director: Philippe de Broca
Genres: Action & Adventure, Indie & Art House, Comedy, Drama
UR     2003     1hr 54min


     
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Movie Details

Actors: Jean-Paul Belmondo, Claudia Cardinale, Jess Hahn, Marcel Dalio, Jean Rochefort
Director: Philippe de Broca
Creators: Christian Matras, Philippe de Broca, Laurence Méry-Clark, Alexandre Mnouchkine, Georges Dancigers, Charles Spaak, Daniel Boulanger
Genres: Action & Adventure, Indie & Art House, Comedy, Drama
Sub-Genres: Swashbucklers, Indie & Art House, Comedy, Drama
Studio: Starz / Anchor Bay
Format: DVD - Color,Widescreen - Subtitled
DVD Release Date: 04/08/2003
Original Release Date: 07/21/1964
Theatrical Release Date: 07/21/1964
Release Year: 2003
Run Time: 1hr 54min
Screens: Color,Widescreen
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaDVD Credits: 1
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 2
MPAA Rating: Unrated
Languages: French
Subtitles: English
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Movie Reviews

Belmondo And Cardinale At Their Best
Cowboy Buddha | Essex UK | 09/10/2004
(4 out of 5 stars)

"A film that, for me, brings back all sorts of fond memories. I first saw it as a teenager during its initial American release in the 60's when I was just discovering that there were some really good films out there that weren't in English. I had loved That Man From Rio and here was the great Jean-Paul Belmondo re-united with director Philippe De Broca in a rollicking swashbuckler. And having the luscious Claudia Cardinale along for the ride didn't hurt either.

Cartouche (also known by the terrible title of Swords Of Blood) is a very French and very Sixties flick. De Broca's loose style of film making encompasses broad comedy, adventure, satire, romance and even tragedy. It is the same style that made The King Of Hearts so memorable and it works just as well here. The story of a charming and incorrigible petty thief who rises to be a sort of bandit chief - after a comic interlude in the army - is the perfect excuse for fist fights, sword fights, chases, and romance with lusty wenches with wonderfully heaving bosoms. The flavor of the 18th century is beautifully captured with a realism that extends to the smallest details. At times, the realistic visuals seem almost at odds with some of the film's more slapstick elements, but it actually contributes to the superb period feel. In this respect, Cartouche is somewhat reminiscent of some of the bawdier bits from that other great Sixties period romp Tom Jones.

Jean-Paul Belmondo is perfect in the title role, not only more than equal to all the physical demands of the part but also moving through all his character's moods effortlessly. Belmondo is a wonderfully natural actor and it is hard to imagine anyone from Hollywood doing this sort of part so well. Co-star Claudia Cardinale has seldom been better or more beautiful - her character is well-named as Venus. She is overflowing with earthy passion both as an outlaw and a lover - even more so as a jealous lover. Both as a teenager and now as an allegedly wiser fifty-something, I could never understand why Belmondo would prefer the icy aristocratic Odile Versois to the magnificently sexy Cardinale.

As usual with these films, Belmondo gets a couple of sidekicks. One is a gentle giant played by Jess Hahn, a sort of European Alan Hale who was forever popping up in films of various languages. The other is a young Jean Rocheforte, that wonderful French actor who would have such a long and impressive career. Here he is The Mole, a slightly more refined bandit with the soul of a poet. The villains are suitably hateful, if not quite in the Basil Rathbone league.

Cartouche is great fun and blessed with true star quality performances from Belmondo and Cardinale. It's one of those movies that is always a joy to take out and watch again. If you're seeing it for the first time, you're in for a real treat."
DELIGHTFUL ACTION ADVENTURE
Robin Simmons | Palm Springs area, CA United States | 06/12/2003
(4 out of 5 stars)

"The legendary Jean-Paul Belmondo stars as 18th Century swordsman, thief and rogue Bourguignon, alias CARTOUCHE. But when he meets the beautiful bandit Venus (the luscious Claudia Cardinale), they launch a series of scandalous raids that rock the Parisian aristocracy. The most wanted man in France is about to discover that true love may be the most dangerous caper of all.The great Phillipe de Broca co-wrote and directed this sumptuous and surprising adventure. No extras, but in this case, the movie is more than enough. Recommended."
Cartouche
Robin Simmons | 11/10/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)

"When this movie was shown in my native country of Cuba in 1967 three years after being filmed, it was a sensation. Claudia Cardinale and Belmondo were great together, I have searched for this film, together with La Ragazza con la valigia and That man from Rio. Belmondo was a true James Bond in the adventures of the Amazone. Great films for the adolecents. They bring nostalgic memories of days gone. Belmondo and Cardinale are immortal."
RIP Philippe de Broca, Farewell, A Bientot
Kevin Killian | San Francisco, CA United States | 11/29/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)

"In CARTOUCHE you made the rest of the 60s filmmakers seem out of date, and in Belmondo and Cardinale you found the perfect actors who could add the bubbles to your brand of filmic champagne. Now that you are gone, we think back to all the pleasures you have given us over the years, from your little parts in BREATHLESS and 400 BLOWS, to your most recent work discovering the Welsh coalminer's daughter Catherine Zeta Jones, and we are grateful to you for your inspired interventions and pizzazz. Not since Ernst Lubitsch has flair been filmed so perfectly and gallantly, and not since Clouzot has action been so well blended with nail-biting suspense. Our hearts are sad today and we wish your extended family well in these difficult days. Belmondo and Cardinale are still with us and thanks to you, we will always have them in excelsis, as the perfect man and woman au cinema. Merci, De Broca!"