The Return Of The Musketeers -1989- Today

All for one... and one for the last time.

Billed as a rollicking adventure set 20 years after the original, The Return is a film of stark contrasts: it is simultaneously a nostalgic victory lap and a tragic epitaph. To understand the film, one must look beyond the plumed hats and sword clashes into the real-world drama that haunted its production. Set in 1649, France is once again teetering on the brink of civil war. The young King Louis XIV is still a child, and the regency of Anne of Austria is challenged by the rebellious nobles of the Fronde. The Cardinal Mazarin (Philippe Noiret) rules with a slippery, miserly grip. The Return of the Musketeers -1989-

What makes The Return fascinating is its tone. The slapstick of the 1973 films (the laundry scene, the pillow fight) is largely gone. In its place is a weary, autumnal humor. When Porthos complains about his joints or Athos drinks to forget the futility of honor, you sense Lester projecting the actors’ real ages and frustrations onto the characters. The film feels less like an adventure and more like a reunion of old soldiers who know they are one battle away from the grave. No discussion of The Return of the Musketeers can omit the tragedy that defines its legacy. During the filming in Toledo, Spain, veteran character actor Roy Kinnear , who played the bumbling but lovable Planchet (D’Artagnan’s servant), fell from a horse. The horse stumbled on the cobblestones and fell on top of Kinnear, fracturing his pelvis. Due to inadequate medical facilities nearby and a series of logistical failures, he suffered a heart attack in the hospital and died the next day. All for one

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