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- The Iron Mask
-
-
- (MARCH 4, 1929)
-
- The Iron Mask. The voice, like all filmed voices, creaks a
- little, but the spirit which the poetry fails to achieve is
- incorporated in the superb acrobatics of the only living actor
- who is also a great athlete. He has his best role
- again--D'Artagnan. Cardinal Richelieu, crafty, red-robed, plots
- endlessly to separate the four swashbucklers who at night sleep
- side by side in one wide bed and finally die side by side in one
- battle. Under the window ledge a saddle waits; one leap, and
- rescue drums toward the girl (Marguerite de la Motte) who,
- drooping like a flower, dies in his arms. First swordsman of
- France, D'Artagnan snatches from the dark tower by the river the
- betrayed king with his sad, muzzled face. Best shot: the four
- singing swashbucklers returning form the inn.
-
- Photographer Henry Sharp, Director Allan (Robin Hood) Dwan
- and Costume Designer Maurice Leloir, who has illustrated the
- best printed edition of Dumas, supply that scrupulous historical
- detail which has always made Fairbanks pictures an improvement,
- for U.S. audiences, on the work of romantic authors. Better also
- than Dumas, rhythm and comedy are by Fairbanks. He has fought
- victoriously with life some inner battle which for most people
- ends in defeat. Middle age has failed to slow up his body. He
- enables audiences of all ages to study what it is that makes
- boys the real superiors of grown-ups.
-
- Douglas Elton Fairbanks was fired from a Denver office where
- he filled inkwells because in odd moments he broke furniture,
- stood on his head. In a stock company and later as a juvenile
- on Broadway he found that public disorder could be profitable.
- In 1907 he married one Anna Beth Sully, daughter and heir of a
- soapmaker who stipulated that Fairbanks must superintend his
- boiling grease-vats. Six months later Fairbanks returned to the
- stage, was divorced in 1918, married Mary Pickford in 1920.
- Once, locked out of his room in the Plaza Hotel, Manhattan, he
- climbed up the face of the building. In Hollywood he is called
- "Doug," his wife Miss Pickford. Social leaders, they dance only
- with each other. She looks after the family accounts. After
- making his first picture, The Lamb, for the old Triangle company
- for $2,000 a week, he developed a type of film peculiar to
- himself, spent $700,000 on The Three Musketeers, almost as much
- on Robin Hood. Other famous ones: The Nut, The Thief of Baghdad,
- Don Q, The Black Pirate, The Gaucho.
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