Misplaced Pages

The Black Shield of Falworth

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
1954 medieval historical adventure film by Rudolph Maté
The Black Shield of Falworth
Theatrical release poster by Reynold Brown
Directed byRudolph Maté
Written byOscar Brodney
Based onMen of Iron
1954 novel
by Howard Pyle
Produced byRobert Arthur
Melville Tucker
StarringTony Curtis
Janet Leigh
David Farrar
Barbara Rush
Herbert Marshall
CinematographyIrving Glassberg
Edited byTed J. Kent
Music byHans J. Salter
Production
company
Universal Pictures
Distributed byUniversal Pictures
Release date
  • September 2, 1954 (1954-09-02)
Running time99 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$1.8 million

The Black Shield of Falworth is a 1954 American Technicolor historical adventure film from Universal-International, produced by Robert Arthur and Melville Tucker and directed by Rudolph Maté. It stars Tony Curtis, Janet Leigh, David Farrar, Herbert Marshall, and Torin Thatcher. The screenplay, set in Medieval England, was adapted by Oscar Brodney and is based on Howard Pyle's 1891 novel Men of Iron. The original music score was composed by Hans J. Salter although his name does not appear in the screen credits. The only musical notation is given as: "Music Supervision by Joseph Gershenson". Made Universal's music department head in 1940, Gershenson's name appeared on nearly every film made by that studio from 1949–1969.

The film was Universal-International's first feature made in CinemaScope. It opened in New York City's Times Square on October 6, 1954 at the Loew's State Theater. It was the second of five feature films in which husband and wife Tony Curtis and Janet Leigh appeared together on screen during their marriage (1952–1961).

Plot

Myles Falworth (Tony Curtis) and his sister Meg (Barbara Rush) live in obscurity on a farm in Crisbey-Dale with their guardian Diccon Bowman (Rhys Williams). This is to protect them from the attainder placed upon their family by King Henry IV of England (Ian Keith) because their father has been (falsely) accused of treason and murdered by the Earl of Alban (David Farrar). When a hunting party comprising the Earl of Alban, the lord of Crisbey-Dale, and another nobleman, Sir Robert, stop at their farm for refreshment, they are repulsed by Myles, who stops them from molesting his sister.

This confrontation accelerates Diccon's plans to send them to Mackworth Castle in Derbyshire (based on the eponymous castle), so that they can come under the protection of William, Earl of Mackworth (Herbert Marshall), a close friend of Myles' and Meg's father. In Myles he sees the man who can finally rid England of the evil machinations of the Earl of Alban. Trained by Sir James, Mackworth's trainer of squires and men of arms, who is harder on him than the other squires, and honed to a fine fighting edge, Myles is first trained to be a squire, then as a knight. He is finally knighted by King Henry the Fourth.

His knighting results in his arrest as a traitor under the rules of attainder; his father, the Earl of Falworth, had been attainted of treason by a young King Henry, the same king who had knighted Sir Myles. Myles demands, and is granted the right of trial by combat against the Earl of Alban who had named his father traitor. He is successful in killing Alban in a trial by combat that turned into an attempt to murder the King, foiling the Earl's attempt to seize the English crown. Afterwards, King Henry restores Myles to his family name, rank, and lands.

Myles, having fallen in love with Lady Anne (Janet Leigh), the Earl of Mackworth's daughter while living at the castle, is finally able to propose marriage, having he has proven his mettle. Mackworth gives his hearty consent, and the two families are joined.

Cast

False quotation

The film is famous for an apocryphal line, attributed to Tony Curtis and rendered as "Yonda stands da castle of my fodda" or similar. The plot details above show that this would not fit the story: there is no "castle of my father". The line is said to have come from a remark made by Debbie Reynolds on television. Life magazine attributed the line to Curtis while performing in the 1951 film The Prince Who Was a Thief.

References

  1. "1954 Box Office Champs". Variety Weekly. January 5, 1955. p. 59. - figures are rentals in the US and Canada
  2. IMDb "Joseph Gershenson bio"
  3. Harry Purvis and Clyde Gilmour, Leisure Ways magazine, 1980s.
  4. "Beeyoody-ful Life of a Movie Caliph". Life. November 17, 1961. p. 170.

External links

Films directed by Rudolph Maté
Novels by Howard Pyle
Novels
Adaptations
Categories: