10/10
Novarro as the villain! And why not?
9 January 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Copyright 29 July 1922 by Metro Pictures Corporation. New York opening at the Astor: 31 July 1922. U.S. release: 11 September 1922. 10 reels. 10,467 feet. 116 minutes.

COMMENT: Selected by The New York Times as one of the best films of the year, the familiar story (re-made with Ronald Colman in 1937 and Stewart Granger in 1952) is given grand treatment here.

Some critics have complained of this version's lack of action. While it's true that Ingram does tend to concentrate more on the romance between Lewis Stone's reluctant Rassendyll and the beautiful princess (charmingly enacted by Alice Terry) and also on a closer examination of Black Michael's political intriguing than do the various remakes, there is nonetheless a fair amount of action-and it is well handled too, particularly the final sword duels between hero and villains with all the players including Stone, Holmes and Novarro doing their own fencing and doing it very ably indeed. In addition to these excitements, as might be expected, cinema stylist Rex Ingram has a grand time with all the sets, costumes and panoply of Zenda. It's amazing how close the remakes follow not only the plot and the various incidents, but even the incidentals like the opening knockabout at the railway station. Ramon Novarro's fans will be a little disappointed to find their hero playing the villain (especially as he is not quite as charming as in other versions), but everyone cheers when the beautiful Barbara La Marr enters. AVAILABLE on DVD through Grapevine. Quality rating varies from 5 to 7 out of ten, but almost all is quite watchable
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