The Charge of the Light Brigade (1936)
Directed by Michael Curtiz

Action / Adventure / Romance / War

Film Review

Abstract picture representing The Charge of the Light Brigade (1936)
One of the most spectacular films to come out of Hollywood in the 1930s, The Charge of the Light Brigade still manages to impress with its magnificent battle sequences, which are among the most visually impressive that cinema has given us.  The dull romantic subplot may date the film and slow down the action somewhat, but the sheer scale and intensity of the battle scenes make up for this with a vengeance.  The film was inspired by Alfred Lord Tennyson's famous poem of the same title and, whilst it is awash with historical inaccuracies, it serves as a fitting tribute to the valour and resolve of the men who died at the Battle of Balaclava in 1854, one of the most unforgiveable blunders in military history.

Fresh from his success in Captain Blood (1935), Errol Flynn returns, firing on all cylinders, in the role that he would make his own for the following decade, that of the dynamic action hero.  The film was directed with vigour and a keen eye for detail by Michael Curtiz, an Austro-Hungarian immigrant who, in a career spanning five decades, made some of Hollywood's best loved films, including Casablanca (1942).  Curtiz worked with Flynn on a dozen films, including Captain Blood and The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938).

If The Charge of the Light Brigade is less well-known than Flynn's other classic adventure films, that could be because Warner Brothers refused to re-release the film after it became public knowledge that several horses died during the famous cavalry charge sequence.  Trip wires were used to bring the horses down, a contemptible practice that was outlawed by the United States Congress not long after the film was made.  Tony Richardson's 1968 film of the same title may be more historically accurate, but this romanticised fable of doomed heroism is much more engaging, an example of the early Hollywood blockbuster at its best.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Michael Curtiz film:
The Walking Dead (1936)

Film Synopsis

In the early 1850s, Geoffrey Vickers and his brother Perry are British officers in the 27th Lancers, a regiment stationed in the Indian city of Chukoti.  It so happens that both men are in love with the same woman, Elsa, but whilst she is engaged to Geoffrey, it is Perry who has won her heart.  When Geoffrey learns of his brother's treachery, he is distraught, but he soon has weightier matters to deal with.  A local prince, Surat Khan, decides to sever his ties with the British and ally himself with the Russians, who are preparing for a war against the British and the French in the Crimea.  To show where his new allegiances lie, Surat Khan leads an all-out attack on Chukoti, massacring all of the inhabitants.  This callous slaughter goads Geoffrey into falsifying military orders that will commit the 27th Lancers to an attack on the Russian forces at Balaklava, where Surat Khan is known to be located.  And so into the valley of death rode the six hundred...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.


Film Credits

  • Director: Michael Curtiz
  • Script: Alfred Lord Tennyson (poem), Michael Jacoby (story), Rowland Leigh
  • Cinematographer: Sol Polito
  • Music: Max Steiner
  • Cast: Errol Flynn (Major Geoffrey Vickers), Olivia de Havilland (Elsa Campbell), Patric Knowles (Captain Perry Vickers), Henry Stephenson (Sir Charles Macefield), Nigel Bruce (Sir Benjamin Warrenton), Donald Crisp (Colonel Campbell), David Niven (Captain James Randall), C. Henry Gordon (Surat Khan), G.P. Huntley (Major Jowett), Robert Barrat (Count Igor Volonoff), Spring Byington (Lady Octavia Warrenton), E.E. Clive (Sir Humphrey Harcourt), J. Carrol Naish (Subahdar-Major Puran Singh), Walter Holbrook (Cornet Charles Barclay), Princess Baba (Prema's Mother), Charles Sedgwick (Cornet Lawrence Pearson), Scotty Beckett (Prema Singh), George Regas (Wazir), Helen Sanborn (Mrs. Jowett), Jimmy Aubrey (Orderly)
  • Country: USA
  • Language: English
  • Support: Black and White
  • Runtime: 115 min

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