Bluebeard (1972 film) explained

Bluebeard
Director:Edward Dmytryk
Producer:Alexander Salkind[1]
Story:
Starring:
Music:Ennio Morricone
Cinematography:Gábor Pogány
Editing:Jean Pavel
Production Companies:
  • Gloria Film S.r.l.
  • Barnabé Productions S.a.r.l.
  • Geiselgasteig Film GmbH[2]
Distributor:Cinerama Releasing Corporation
Runtime:115 minutes
Country:
  • Italy
  • France
  • West Germany
Language:English
Gross:$1.2 million[3]

Bluebeard is a 1972 mystery comedy drama film written and directed by Edward Dmytryk and starring Richard Burton, Raquel Welch, Joey Heatherton, and Sybil Danning.

The film's plot is very loosely based on the French folktale of a nobleman whose latest wife grows curious when he tells her she may enter any room in his castle but one.

Plot

In Austria in the 1930s, Baron Kurt von Sepper is a World War I veteran fighter pilot with a reputation as a "ladykiller" and a frightening blue-tinged beard. In public the Baron carefully maintains his image as a war hero, a seemingly devout Catholic and a patriotic member of the Fatherland Front, but the Baron has two dark secrets he is keen to hide. All of his previous wives have died in mysterious circumstances, and he exploited the chaos of the Austrian Civil War to instigate a pogrom against a Jewish community.

Cast

Production

Filmportal.de noted that some sources claim that Luciano Sacripanti also directed the film.

Filming took place in Budapest, Hungary and Rome, Italy.[4] In February, 1972, Burton's wife, Elizabeth Taylor celebrated her 40th birthday in Budapest. The party, held at the Hotel Intercontinental, was attended by several celebrities, including Michael Caine, Grace Kelly, Ringo Starr, David Niven, and Raquel Welch, and became a huge media sensation in the then-Communist country.[5]

Release

Bluebeard had its world premiere at the Pantages Theatre in Hollywood on August 15, 1972. It was released in West Germany on December 15, 1972.

Reception

Critical response

Roger Ebert gave the film two stars out of four and wrote, "There is no longer any novelty in watching the sad disintegration of Richard Burton's acting career."[6] Roger Greenspun of The New York Times wrote: "I have rarely seen a horror film so coyly aware of its own camp potential. But it is better at being foolishly serious than at being slyly humorous, and its few good moments come before it admits that its spook lightning and its maybe 3,000 pounds of phony cobwebs are essentially a joke."[7] Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune gave the film one star out of four and wrote that the scenes of sadism "are designed to pander to people who enjoy seeing women abused".[8] He put the film on a year-end list he made of the sickest films of 1972.[9] Variety called it "high camp".[10] Kevin Thomas of the Los Angeles Times panned the film as "123 minutes of unrelieved boredom and morbidity", adding: "Heavily made up and dyed, and speaking in a post-synched German accent, Burton seems to be sleepwalking."[11]

Gary Arnold of The Washington Post wrote: "Bluebeard is so lacking in both style and conviction that it's often more muddled and ineffective than actively offensive." He wrote of Burton that "unless he's contemplating a permanent career in exploitation movies, it would be difficult to sink below this credit ... his final words are, 'This is ridiculous', but he's done nothing to convince us that he's superior to the material, that he's just doing some good-humored slumming and ought to be indulged his bad judgment".[12] Clyde Jeavons of The Monthly Film Bulletin faulted "Dmytryk's indecision over whether to plump for black comedy or straight-faced horror, and it demonstrates his overall failure to find either a style or a formula sturdy enough to carry the film's heavy burden of absurdities and plain bad acting".[13]

Videohound's Golden Movie Retriever refers to the film as a "soporific remake of the famous story."[14]

John Stanley writes: "Director Edward Dmytryk provides titillation, soft-core nudity, lesbianism, sadism. But scenes are played so flatly, one doesn't know if to laugh or scream."[15]

External links

"Bluebeard: The Beast of Richard Burton" http://www.badmoviesandthewomanwholovesthem.com/2012/10/bluebeard-beast-of-richard-burton.html

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Catalog of Copyright Entries: Third Series. 1972. August 11, 2017. 99.
  2. Web site: Blaubart. Filmportal.de. German, English. August 11, 2017.
  3. Book: Donahue, Suzanne Mary. American film distribution : the changing marketplace. 1987 . UMI Research Press . 297. 978-0-8357-1776-2. Please note figures are for rentals in US and Canada
  4. Web site: Kékszakállú Richard Burton Magyarországon.
  5. Web site: Világsztárok csapták Budapesten a Kádár-korszak legnagyobb buliját. 27 February 2018.
  6. Web site: Bluebeard . Ebert . Roger . September 13, 1972 . . December 18, 2018 .
  7. Greenspun, Roger (August 19, 1972). "Screen: Richard Burton as Bluebeard—He Plays Slayer of 7 Beautiful Women Baron Relates Story in Series of Flashbacks". The New York Times. 28.
  8. Siskel, Gene (September 11, 1972). "Bluebeard". Chicago Tribune. Section 2, p. 16.
  9. Siskel, Gene (January 14, 1973). "The sickest of '72...... to a healthier '73". Chicago Tribune. Section 6, p. 6.
  10. "Film Reviews: Bluebeard". Variety. August 23, 1972. 6.
  11. Thomas, Kevin (August 17, 1972). "'Bluebeard,' Burton, Budapest: Boredom". Los Angeles Times. Part IV, p. 15.
  12. Arnold, Gary (September 22, 1972). "Tales of Horror and Sexploitation". The Washington Post. B15.
  13. Jeavons . Clyde . April 1973 . Bluebeard . . 40 . 471 . 72 .
  14. Jim Craddock, ed. Videohound's Golden Movie Retriever, Gale Publications, 2016, p. 154
  15. John Stanley. Creature Features Movie Guide Strikes Again 4th revised ed., Creatures at Large Press, 1994, p. 53.