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Adventures of Don Quixote

Don Quichotte

United Kingdom, France

1933

73 Min
Black and White
1.37:1
English
  • Currently 3.8/5 Stars.
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DIR Georg Wilhelm Pabst

PROD Georg Wilhelm Pabst

SCR Georg Wilhelm Pabst, Alexandre Arnoux, Paul Morand

DP Nicolas Farkas, Paul Portier

CAST Feodor Chaliapin Sr., George Robey, Oscar Asche, René Donnio, Frank Stanmore, Miles Mander, Wally Patch, Sidney Fox, Emily Fitzroy, Renée Valliers

ED Jean Oser

PROD DES Andrej Andrejew

MUSIC Jacques Ibert

SOUND J. Dell

Cannes (Out of Competition)

Synopsis

The English version of G.W.Pabst’s monumental three-language (English, French and German – separate versions each) In Spain, in the sixteenth century, an elderly gentleman named Don Quixote has gone mad from reading too many books on chivalry. Proclaiming himself a knight, he sets out with his squire, Sancho Panza, to reform the world and revive the age of chivalry, choosing a promiscuous woman to be his noble lady Dulcinea. He mistakes inns for castles, a play about chivalry for the real thing, flocks of sheep for armies, convicts for wronged prisoners, and windmills for giants. While he and Sancho are off on their adventures, his niece, her fiancee, and the local priest think up a strategy to get him back home. —IMDb

Director

Original

Georg Wilhelm Pabst

Born in Bohemia to Viennese parents, director G. W. Pabst made only one American film in his career, yet became the darling of U.S. critics and movie historians for a handful of brilliant silent works. Pabst studied at Vienna’s Academy of Decorate Arts, then embarked on a theatrical career in 1906. He worked as a stage director in Europe and briefly in New York with a German-language company until World War I. Back in Vienna in the early 1920s, Pabst was one of the vanguards of the experimental theater movement. This led to an interest in the less-confining vistas of film. Establishing himself as a movie director in 1923, Pabst made his mark by turning out productions of pessimistic realism, intermixed with unstressed impressionism. He directed Garbo in A Joyless Street (1925), then helmed the pioneering Freudian drama Secrets of a Soul (1926). Pabst helped create the “Louise Brooks mystique” by casting the expatriate American actress in two of his most elaborate (and most heavily censored… read more

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chanandre

3Dec10

Master fuck*ng piece. Loved every second of it. As of now it's my favourite film version of Cervantes magnum opus, up there with albert serra's. Chaliapine totally wins the thing. Apart from being a genius Opera singer, he was a terrific Quixote. Loved it. That ending, my oh my....

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