The Count of Monte Cristo (1961 film)
The Count of Monte Cristo (French: Le comte de Monte Cristo, US: The Story of the Count of Monte Cristo) is a 1961 French adventure film version of Alexandre Dumas' 1844 novel directed by Claude Autant-Lara and starring Louis Jourdan, Yvonne Furneaux, Pierre Mondy and Franco Silva. PlotEdmund Dantes is falsely accused by those jealous of his good fortune, and is sentenced to spend the rest of his life in the notorious island prison, Chateau d'if. There, a prisoner tells Edmund of a fantastic treasure hidden away on a tiny island. Cast
ReceptionThe film was the seventh most popular film at the French box office in 1961. The sixth most popular was a version of The Three Musketeers.[2] The film was made with some finance from Seven Arts Productions and was released by Warner Bros.[3][4] Variety wrote the producers "have spared little expense in mounting a pictorially rich and dramatically expansive reproduction of the story...But one vital miscaiculation strips their effort-of sufficient appeal for the bulk of the: modern audience. In adhering rigidiy to the plodding, stilted and weighty melodramatic style reasonably fashionable in less suphisticated by gone times, the creators of this version have failed to sense, or refused to reckon with, the realistic requirements of modern screen."[5] References
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