Wednesday, August 5, 2020

CONSENSUS #38. El Cid (1931)


SYNOPSIS: "El Cid" is the tale of a legendary Spanish medieval hero during the period when the Moors controlled parts of Spain. El Cid is a Christian knight who is the epitome of chivalry. He gets in trouble with the King when he treats some Muslim foes fairly. An accusation of treason leads to a duel to maintain his family's honor. He ends up killing his fiancé's father which puts a damper on her love for him. He then gets in trouble with the new king for accusing him of conspiring to kill his brother. This gets El Cid exiled. He is brought back to capture and then hold a key port. A villainous Muslim leader lands an army and attempts to take the city.

BACK-STORY: El Cid is an historical epic about the legendary Spanish medieval hero Don Rodrigo Dial de Vivar, known as El Cid. It was released in 1961 and was directed by Anthony Mann. It is in the same genre as Ben Hur and similarly stars Charleton Heston. His co-star Sophia Loren had a $200/week hairdresser allowance. The film was shot mostly in Spain. It was nominated for Academy Awards for Art Direction, Original Music Score, and Best Song. The movie was a box office hit and was well received by critics.

TRIVIA:  Wikipedia, imd

1.  The Moors (Spanish Muslims) called Rodrigo Diaz de Viver “El Cid” which means “the lord”.  Christians called him El Campeador (“the one who stands up in the battlefield”).

2.  Loren’s salary included $200 per week for her hairdres

3.  The film used 7,000 extras, 10,000 costumes, and 35 ships.

4.  Heston and Loren did not get along.  In love scenes Heston had a hard time looking her in the eye.  The main conflict was over her high salary.  Heston later admitted that he had been a jerk.

 

Belle and Blade  =  N/A

Brassey’s              =  4.0

Video Hound       =  N/A

War Movies         =  N/A

Military History  =  #63

Channel 4             =  #86

Film Site                =  yes

101 War Movies  =  no

Rotten Tomatoes  =  no

 

OPINION: El Cid was better than I thought it would be. Although I am a big fan of Ben Hur, most of the old-school historical epics seem so outdated and overblown. This movie has some of those characteristics, but it is highly entertaining and accurate enough to pass the sniff test. Its strengths overcome its flaws.

Some of the flaws include a sappy love story and twirl your mustache type villains. Heston and Loren do not have much chemistry and the ups and downs are not realistic. I doubt Herbert Loms Ben Yusuf is considered politically correct in todays Muslim-tolerant atmosphere. However, the movie is surprisingly even-handed in its depiction of the Moors. There is a nice balance of evil and good Christians and Muslims. The main flaw is El Cid is too perfect. He is unbeatable as a warrior, at one point he defeats a dozen knights virtually singlehandedly. He is totally loyal to his lords, even when they are corrupt and trying to kill him. He is the perfect mate, being understanding when his fiancé despises him and tries to have him killed.

The strengths include the wonderful (if too brightly lit) castle interiors and the Ben Hur style score that does a great job setting the mood. The 70mm Technicolor is vibrant. The action is crisp and is three for three with the duel, the trial by combat, and the beach battle. The ending is memorable, even though its ridiculous.

El Cid is a spectacle in the grandest sense of the word. It is epic in its scale. It is old-school Hollywood at its best, not its worst.  However, it is overrated at #38.  It might belong in the greatest 100, but not this high.  Plus, it is not firmly in the war movie genre.


No comments:

Post a Comment

Please fell free to comment. I would love to hear what you think and will respond.