Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

The Prisoner of Zenda

 
Movies:

The Prisoner of Zenda

  • Director: Richard Quine
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Adventure
  • Movie Type: Romantic Adventure
  • Themes: Twins and Lookalikes, Crowned Heads, Assumed Identities
  • Main Cast: Peter Sellers, Peter Sellers, Lynne Frederick, Lionel Jeffries, Elke Sommer, Gregory Sierra
  • Release Year: 1979
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 108 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG

Plot

The beloved novel by Anthony Hope is shown here in its sixth film adaptation. In this story, Peter Sellers is Rudolf IV, the reigning monarch of the tiny nation of Ruritania. One day, while flying in a hot air balloon, a champagne cork sends him plummeting to his death. The rightful heir, who is to be crowned Rudolf V (also Peter Sellers), is kidnapped by Duke Michael (Jeremy Kemp), who is next in line for the throne. Luckily, the good guys find Syd (Peter Sellers once again), a London taxi-driver who closely resembles the kidnapped heir. While impersonating the monarch-to-be, Syd falls in love with the prince's fiancee Princess Flavia (Lynne Frederick). Neither a box-office nor a critical success, this amiable 1979 swashbuckler nonetheless features fine performances by Peter Sellers, who died in 1980. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide

Cast

Jeremy Kemp - Duke Michael; Catherine Schell - Antoinette; Simon Williams - Fritz; Stuart Wilson - Rupert of Hentzau; Norman Rossington - Bruno; John Laurie - Archbishop; Graham Stark - Erik; Michael Balfour - Luger; Arthur Howard - Deacon; Ian Abercrombie - Johann; Michael Segal - Conductor; Stéphane Audran; John Bear Hudkins; Pete Kellett; Gil Perkins; Joe Yrigoyen; Eric Cord; Joe Dunne; Mickey Gilbert; Orwin Harvey; John Moio; Victor Paul; Larry Holt; George Robotham; Harry Wuestenhagen

Credit

Herwig Libowitsky - Art Director, Peter Macgregor-Scott - Associate Producer, Sue Yelland - Costume Designer, Victor Tourjansky - First Assistant Director, Ted Morley - First Assistant Director, David Menteer - First Assistant Director, Richard Quine - Director, Byron Brandt - Editor, Henry Mancini - Composer (Music Score), John J. Lloyd - Production Designer, Arthur Ibbetson - Cinematographer, Peter Macgregor-Scott - Producer, Walter Mirisch - Producer, Joe Chevalier - Set Designer, Marc E. Meyer, Jr. - Set Designer, Albert J. Whitlock - Special Effects, Brian Marshall - Sound/Sound Designer, Dick Clement - Screenwriter, Ian La Frenais - Screenwriter, Stephen A. Hope - Music Editor, Anthony Hope - Book Author

Similar Movies

The Prince and the Pauper
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: The Prisoner of Zenda (1979 film)
Top
The Prisoner of Zenda

original film poster
Directed by Richard Quine
Produced by Walter Mirisch
Written by Dick Clement
Ian La Frenais
Starring Peter Sellers
Lynne Frederick
Lionel Jeffries
Elke Sommer
Music by Henry Mancini
Cinematography Arthur Ibbetson
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Release date(s) 1979
Running time 108 min.
Language English

The Prisoner of Zenda is a 1979 American comedy film directed by Richard Quine and adapted from the adventure novel by Anthony Hope, first published in 1894. The novel tells the story of a man who has to impersonate a king, whom he happens to closely resemble, when the king is abducted by enemies on the eve of his coronation.

The comedy was loosely adapted by Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais. It starred Peter Sellers, Lynne Frederick, Lionel Jeffries, Elke Sommer, Gregory Sierra, Jeremy Kemp and Catherine Schell. It has echoes of not only Hope's book but also several other well known novels, especially Dumas's The Man in the Iron Mask. Sellers plays three roles that of the Ruthenian King Rudolph V and the London cab driver Sydney Frewin who is brought in to portray the missing King with whom he shares an uncanny resemblance. Sellers also portrayed the aged King Rudoph IV at the start of the film, before he is killed in a Hot air balloon accident.

Plot

In the 1979 version, the old King, Rudolf IV (Sellers), dies in a balloon accident upon the celebration of his seventieth birthday. In order to secure the throne, General Sapt and his nephew Fritz travel to London, where the king's son, Rudolf V (Sellers), resides and lives through the day in London's pleasure establishments; but the King's demented half-brother Michael, thinking that he is the better claimant, sends an assassin after them. Hansom-cab driver Sydney (or Sidney) Frewin (Sellers), the King's bastard half-brother from an affair with a British actress, rescues Rudolf from an assassination attempt. Once his resemblance to the King is noticed, the General engages him ostensibly as the King's coachman, but actually Frewin is to fulfill the role of a decoy. The ruse is quickly uncovered, however, when during an attack by Michael's men the royal guardsmen address Frewin as their new king, and the two look-alikes get acquainted.

In an unattended moment, Rudolf is captured by Henzau and brought to Michael's castle of Zenda. Out of necessity, Frewin has to play the role of the king for the coronation ceremony. Princess Flavia, Rudolf's fiancee (Frederick), is perceptive enough to see through the ruse, and after Frewin and the General have confided in her, she quickly becomes Frewin's trusted ally and love interest. Complicating the scheme on Frewin's side is a jealous Count whose wife (Sommer) has become infatuated with Rudolf, and on Michael's side by his mistress, Antoinette, who is wildly jealous about the prospect of Michael marrying Flavia and in turn is the love interest of the slightly unbalanced Rupert von Henzau, Michael's second-in-command.

After several assassination attempts, Michael attempts to lure Frewin into a trap. While the trap fails, Frewin, acting as Henzau's coach driver, is recognized and captured upon arrival in Zenda. Frewin and Rudolf escape with Antoinette's and Henzau's help, and Frewin succeeds to the throne, enabling him to marry the Princess Flavia and leaving the now former King, masquerading as Frewin, free to pursue his interests in the Countess and the London gambling tables.

Cast

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "The Prisoner of Zenda (1979 film)" Read more

 

Mentioned in