- The 1999 restored version (near 104 minutes) by Kino Video, has the original speeches by d'Artagnan, the title cards, but a new musical score by Carl Davis, played by the City of Prague Philharmonica Orchestra. The restored version is distributed by Kino Video and Photoplay Productions.
- The 1952 reissue version (severely re-edited to 72 minutes) by Odyssey Pictures Co., removed the intertitles and a few scenes, substituted the sound by a new narration voiced by Douglas Fairbanks Jr., and a new orchestral score by Allan Gray played by the Philarmonia Orchestra. This version is the basis of most video copies, and was broadcast on American Movie Classics since 1997. An excerpt from that version appears on the 1999 version as a DVD extra.
- The 1929 director's cut (past 103 minutes, of which a 97 minute copy exists in New York The Museum of Modern Art) was a part-talkie film, with a prologue and a second prologue after the intended Intermission card, delivered by d'Artagnan (Douglas Fairbanks) addressing the public directly, title cards for the dialogue, a few color tinted scenes, a few sound effects by Walter Pallmen, and a musical score by Hugo Riesenfeld.
- The 1975 television broadcast (cut to 87 minutes), removed the intertitles and a few scenes, and substituted the soundtrack with an original piano score by William J. Perry. This version was the closing film in the TV series "The Silent Years", hosted by Lillian Gish, and was distributed by Blackhawk Films in video in the 1980s.
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