The Three Musketeers (1992 film)
The Three Musketeers | |
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File:The Three Musketeers1992.JPG | |
Directed by | Masakazu Higuchi Chinami Namba |
Produced by | Diane Eskenazi |
Written by | Jack Olesker |
Based on | The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas |
Music by | Richard Hurwitz John Arrias |
Production company | |
Distributed by | GoodTimes Home Video |
Release date |
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Running time | 50 minutes |
Country | Japan United States |
Language | English |
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The Three Musketeers is a 1992 animated film directed by Masakazu Higuchi and Chinami Namba that was released directly to video by GoodTimes Home Video. It is based on the classic 1844 novel The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas. Like all other Golden Films productions, the film features a single theme song, "All for One and One for All", written and composed by Richard Hurwitz and John Arrias. It was released a year before Disney’s more successful live-action version
The film tells the story of young D'Artagnan, who dreams of one day being part of the French squad of the Musketeers. His chance arrives when an opportunity to save the Queen of France takes him along with his new friends, the three finest musketeers in France, Athos, Porthos and Aramis, to England. There they must send for the Duke of Buckingham and bring down the evil Cardinal Richelieu.
The Three Musketeers was produced by Golden Films and the American Film Investment Corporation. The movie was released on DVD in 2003, packaged together with Sinbad (1992) and The Count of Monte Cristo (1996).
Plot[edit]
The young D'Artagnan wants to be a musketeer and for this he travels the long way to the city of Paris in France, where he will enter the same academy for musketeers that his father had attended. On his way to Paris, however, he meets up with Monsieur Rochefort. D'Artagnan does not know that his rivalry with Monsieur Rochefort will get him involved in a battle against the evil plot thought up by Cardinal Richelieu against the king and queen of France. When Cardinal Richelieu discovers that the queen had sent valuable diamonds to the Duke of Buckingham in England, a country enemy of France, the cardinal uses the information to blackmail the queen and create a difficult situation between her and King Louis, who now believes his wife to be in love with the Duke of Buckingham. Nobody knows that the diamonds are in possession of an old woman, Milady, who had stolen the diamonds from the duke and had brought them for Rochefort so that they would be nowhere to be found; Rochefort allows her to hold on to the diamonds in order to ensure this.
Shortly after entering the academy of musketeers, D'Artagnan meets three of the finest among them, Porthos, Athos and Aramis. Though their first meeting had not gone well and had led to the challenging of several duels, the four of them become fine friends shortly after, since all four fight against the Cardinal's soldiers. When searching for lodging in Paris, D'Artagnan meets the lovely Constance Bonacieux, a good friend of the queen. Cardinal Richelieu orders all of the queen's closest friends to be arrested so that no one will be able to defend her once King Louis decides to have her beheaded. D'Artagnan defends Constance when a group of soldiers try to insolently have her arrested and then takes her to the safety of the queen. Constance trusts the queen and when she learns of the awful accusation that's been laid upon her, the woman asks of D'Artagnan to travel to England and fetch the Duke of Buckingham, the only one who may now save the queen. D'Artagnan, now in love with Constance but not fully trusting of the queen, gathers his three friends, the three musketeers and all of them travel to England together. There, they meet the Duke of Buckingham, as well as Milady, who confesses the crime of theft she is committed and attempts to murder the duke, believing he is in love with the queen of France instead of her. The five of them, D'Artagnan, the duke and the three musketeers, return to France just as the queen is being led to the guillotine. King Louis begs his wife to lie to him, to tell him that she did not send the diamonds out for the Duke of Buckingham, even if she did, but the queen refuses.
When the cardinal and the soldiers discover the presence of the duke, they fear for the safety of the king and attack the five men. As D'Artagnan comes close to finishing off Rochefort, the Cardinal calls everyone to stop, for the King himself does not wish Rochefort to be harmed. The Duke of Buckingham then bows before King Louis and explains to him that he is in reality the brother of his wife, not the lover. The queen explains that she and her brother had been separated and that she had been sent to France. She had sent the diamonds to the Duke to prevent him from being locked up when he was left almost penniless and when difficulties had begun between France and England. She had had to remain silent, for she could not reveal she was sister to the duke of a land enemy to her own. King Louie then apologizes to his wife for doubting her, befriends the Duke of Buckingham, declares peace between their two countries and finally declares D'Artagnian as an official musketeer in his service.
Cast[edit]
- Cam Clarke as D'Artagnan
- Jeff Bennett as King Louis, Rochefort
- Tress MacNeille as Milady, Queen
External links[edit]
This article "The Three Musketeers (1992 film)" is from Wikipedia. The list of its authors can be seen in its historical and/or the page Edithistory:The Three Musketeers (1992 film). Articles copied from Draft Namespace on Wikipedia could be seen on the Draft Namespace of Wikipedia and not main one.
- 1992 films
- English-language films
- Golden Films animated films
- GoodTimes Entertainment
- Japanese films
- American films
- Films based on The Three Musketeers
- 1992 animated films
- 1992 anime films
- Direct-to-video animated films
- 1990s American animated films
- Films set in the 1620s
- Films set in France
- Films set in Paris
- Animated films based on novels
- Cultural depictions of Cardinal Richelieu
- Cultural depictions of Louis XIII
- Films directed by Masakazu Higuchi
- Films directed by Chinami Namba