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TIME: Almanac 1990
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1990 Time Magazine Compact Almanac, The (1991)(Time).iso
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20mask
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1990-10-27
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45 lines
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.