That stands for Frequently Lacked Answers. These are all the questions I get from my web site, most of which I cant answer. So if you know the answer, please dont hesitate to write!
The Musketeers (of the book, anyway, I dont know about real life) were a military company. But they were charged with protecting the king, so wouldnt normally have to go out in the field. They did use muskets, just not very often. Go back and read the chapter about the siege of La Rochelle and youll see them discharging their duty as Musketeers with muskets.
I saw the trailer before I saw the movie; it was obvious from the trailer that they were really changing the story a lot. It sounds like a great swashbuckler movie, but certainly not the Musketeers!
Here is the book timeline. Dont read this if you plan on reading the book. Im warning you! You dont want to know the ending!
Now, here, from María José Díaz Sámano, is a summary of the movie:
Warning: The following FAQ contains heavy spoilers, and I mean heavy, for the 1998 movie The Man in the Iron Mask. So, if you have not seen it, you might not want to read it yet. Youve been warned.
Of course, the movie doesnt follow the book at all; in the best Dumas style, it takes the main characters (DArtagnan, Athos, Porthos, Aramis, Raoul, Louis XIV, Phillipe and Anne of Austria) and only respects the basic plot, that is, the twin switch. You already read the book timeline. Here is the movie timeline.
As you can see, writing a list of the differences between the book and the movie is useless. Anyway, lets mention the most notorious ones:
If you like accurate adaptations, you wont like the movie. I myself doubted I would like it when I learned Artagnan was killed at the end, even if the big surprise of his paternity was still missing. But if you love the characters above the plot, theres a good chance you might like it. The portrayals are quite accurate: Artagnan behaves a lot like in the book (willing to place his duty before his friends), Athos nobility and sense of honor are there (hes the one who instructs Phillipe in court manners), Porthos depression echoes his sadness of Twenty Years Later, and Aramis is as scheming and intelligent as ever, playing God with the others lives.
Another high points of the movie are, of course, the strong performances (in spite of their different acting styles, Gabriel Byrne, John Malkovich, Gerard Depardieu and Jeremy Irons, IMO, are perfectly cast, and Leonardo DiCaprio shines with his own light even to those of us who are not his fans), the music (by far the best so far of a Musketeer movie) and the wardrobe, especially the black uniforms. The scene in which the Four Musketeers charge against Louis guards justifies the cost of the ticket. Besides, listening to Depardieu saying the musketeers names in French is delicious.
My advice? Dont expect the movie to be a translation. I took it as another interpretation of the Musketeer saga, and found myself loving it.
Thanks, María!
No, No, and Sort of. The movie doesnt even follow the book, let alone real history. The book is fiction; it may, however, have pulled some names from history. There was certainly a rumor, in fact a number of them, about a mysterious prisoner in an iron or velvet mask. The king, the cardinal, the queen, Buckingham, in fact most of the major political figures, were all real. For the four Musketeers Dumas used borrowed names, but the four heroes were otherwise not real.
Philippe did not replace Louis in real life. Mostly because he didnt exist...
From David Hurst, a possible source for info about what was real and what was fiction in the Iron Mask: One of the minor advantages of the Livre de Poche edition of Le Vicomte de Bragelonne is a small essay by Henri Clouard called Dumas et lhistoire that gives some of his sources and indicates where he changed them. In doing so, he indicates who the originals were.
For more detailed information about what did and didnt happen in real life, see The History of the Three Musketeers.
Depends on which Original Movie youre talking about.
| Year | Movie | Director | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1939 | The Man in the Iron Mask | James Whale | |
| Louis Hayward as Louis and Phillipe. Also, Joan Bennett, Warren William, Alan Hale, and Joseph Schildkraut. Martin and Porter give it three stars out of five. 110 minutes, black and white. | |||
| 1939 | The Three Musketeers | Allan Dwan | |
| Don Ameche is DArtagnan, the Ritz Brothers are the Three Musketeers, and Binnie Barnes is Lady deWinter in this comedy musical. Martin and Porter give it three stars out of five. 73 minutes, black and white. | |||
| 1948 | The Three Musketeers | George Sidney | |
| Gene Kelly is DArtagnan, June Allyson is the Queens seamstress, and Lana Turner is Lady deWinter. Also Van Heflin, Vincent Price, Gig Young, Angela Lansbury, Keenan Wynn. Martin and Porter give it two stars out of five. 128 minutes, black and white. | |||
| 1966 | La Prise de pouvoir par Louis XIV | Roberto Rossellini | |
| Jean-Marie Patte as Louis XIV, Raymond Jourdan as Colbert, Silvagni as Mazarin, Katharina Renn as Ann of Austria, Maurise Barrier as DArtagnan, and someone named André Dumas as La Père Joly. In English this is listed as The Rise of Louis XIV. | |||
| 1973 | The Three Musketeers | Richard Lester | |
| Michael York, Oliver Reed, Racquel Welch, Richard Chamberlain, Faye Dunaway, Charlton Heston. Martin and Porter give it five stars out of five. 105 minutes, PG. | |||
| 1977 | The Man in the Iron Mask | Mike Newell | |
| Richard Chamberlain, Patrick McGoohan, Louis Jordan, Jenny Agutter, Ralph Richardson. Martin and Porter give it three stars out of five. 100 minutes. | |||
| 1979 | The Fifth Musketeer | Ken Annakin | |
| Beau Bridges, Sylvia Kristel, Ursula Andress, Cornel Wilde, Olivia De Havilland, José Ferrer, Rex Harrison, Lloyd Bridges, Alan Hale. Martin and Porter give it two stars out of five. 103 minutes, PG. | |||
| 1993 | The Three Musketeers | Stephen Herek | |
| Chris ODonnell, Keifer Sutherland, Oliver Platt, Charlie Sheen, Tim Curry, Rebecca deMornay. | |||
| 1997 | The Man in the Iron Mask | Randall Wallace | |
| Leonardo diCaprio, Jeremy Irons, John Malkovich, Gabriel Byrne, Gérard Depardieu. | |||
| 1998 | The Man in the Iron Mask | William Richert | |
| Dennis Hayden, Edward Albert, William Richert, Rex Ryon. | |||
See the main Dumas page for where to get the books, but the order is:
Note that apparently, there are some editions that title the first book in the Vicomte series Le Vicomte de Bragellone and the second book as Ten Years Later. The Vicomte was originally published in five volumes with no separate titles, just volume numbers, according to Mordaunt at Gutenberg.
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