The Brigand

The Brigand

Original film poster
Directed by Phil Karlson
Produced by Edward Small
Written by Jesse L. Lasky, Jr.
Alexandre Dumas (novel)
Starring Anthony Dexter
Jody Lawrance
Anthony Quinn
Music by Mario Castelfnuovo-Tedesco
Cinematography W. Howard Greene
Distributed by Columbia Pictures
Release date(s) 25 June 1952
Running time 93 min.
Country United States
Language English

The Brigand is a 1950s romantic adventure filmed in Technicolor and directed by Phil Karlson. It is the second film that Anthony Dexter made for producer Edward Small for Columbia Pictures after his debut in Valentino. Loosely based on The Brigand by Alexandre Dumas, the film is set in the Napoleonic era in 1804 in the mythical Iberian nation of "Mandorra". The film bears a resemblance to The Prisoner of Zenda with Dexter playing a dual role of a rogue exile who impersonates a King in danger of being overthrown by his cousin played by Anthony Quinn.

The scheming Quinn plans a "premeditated accident" to King Lorenzo by giving him a hunting weapon that is rigged to fire backwards; an idea reused by director Phil Karlson in his The Silencers. With the real King unable to perform his duties, the swashbuckling distant relative Carlos DeLago, late of the Sultan of Morocco's Guard steps in to save the Kingdom.

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