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The Iron Mask ()


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King Louis XIII of France is thrilled when his son is born--an heir to the throne. But his Queen has actually delivered twin boys. Cardinal Richelieu sees the second son as a potential for revolution, and has him sent off to Spain to be... See more »

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Cast verified as complete

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D'Artagnan
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The Queen Mother
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Constance
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Milady de Winter
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Madame Peronne
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Louis XIII
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Louis XIV / Twin Brother
Gordon Thorpe ...
Young Prince / Twin Brother
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Cardinal Richelieu
Ullrich Haupt ...
De Rochefort
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Father Joseph
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Planchet - D'Artagnan's Servant
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The King's Valet
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Athos (as Leon Barry)
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Porthos (as Stanley Standford)
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Aramis
Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
Edgar Caldwell ...
Undetermined Secondary Role (uncredited)
Fred Cavens ...
DeRochefort's Ruffian (uncredited)
Madame Chalif ...
Lady of the Court (uncredited)
Paul d'Estournelles de Constant ...
Undetermined Secondary Role (uncredited)
Princess Galitzine ...
Lady of the Court (uncredited)
Edward Gazelle ...
Boy (uncredited)
Frankie Genardi ...
Little Boy (uncredited)
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Fisherman (uncredited)
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Village Child (uncredited)
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Page (uncredited)
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DeRochefort's Ruffian (uncredited)
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Abbess (uncredited)
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Lady of the Court (uncredited)

Directed by

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Allan Dwan

Written by

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Lotta Woods ... (scenario editor)
 
Douglas Fairbanks ... (story) (as Elton Thomas)
 
Alexandre Dumas ... (novels "The Three Musketeers" & "20 Years After") (as Alexandre Dumas père)
 
Douglas Fairbanks ... (screenplay) (uncredited)
 
Douglas Fairbanks ... (titles) (uncredited)
 
Jack Cunningham ... () (uncredited)
 
d'Artagnan ... (book) (uncredited)
 
Allan Dwan ... () (uncredited)
 
Richelieu ... (book) (uncredited)
 
Rochefort ... (book) (uncredited)

Produced by

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Douglas Fairbanks ... producer (uncredited)

Music by

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Carl Davis
Allan Gray ... (music composed by)
William P. Perry
Hugo Riesenfeld ... (uncredited)

Cinematography by

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Henry Sharp ... (photographed by)
Warren Lynch ... (uncredited)

Editorial Department

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William Nolan ... film cutter

Production Design by

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Maurice Leloir ... (uncredited)

Art Direction by

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William Cameron Menzies ... (uncredited)

Set Decoration by

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Burgess Beall ... interior decorator
Carl Oscar Borg ... (uncredited)
Miles Borg ... (uncredited)
Ben Carré ... (uncredited)
Laurence Irving ... (uncredited)

Costume Design by

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Paul Burns ... (master of wardrobe)

Makeup Department

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Fred Carlton Ryle ... makeup artist (uncredited)

Production Management

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Robert Fairbanks ... production manager (uncredited)

Second Unit Director or Assistant Director

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H. Bruce Humberstone ... assistant director (as Bruce Humberstone)
Sherry Shourds ... assistant director (uncredited)
Vinton Vernon ... assistant director (uncredited)

Art Department

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Wilfred Buckland ... artist
Paul Burns ... master of properties
Ben Carré ... artist
David S. Hall ... artist
Jack Holden ... artist
Laurence Irving ... set designer
Edward M. Langley ... artist
Harold Miles ... artist (as H.W. Miles)
Paul Roberts ... props
Selmer L. Chalif ... assistant property master (uncredited)

Sound Department

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Edward Bernds ... sound mixer (uncredited)
Theodore Reed ... recording director (uncredited)

Special Effects by

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Howard C. Lydecker Sr. ... special effects

Stunts

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Fred Cavens ... fencing master (uncredited)

Camera and Electrical Department

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Roy Babbitt ... assistant camera (as Royal Babbitt)
Fred Grossi ... still photographer (uncredited)
Charles E. Lynch ... still photographer (uncredited)
J.W. Montgomery ... chief electrician (uncredited)
Charles Straumer ... assistant camera (uncredited)

Costume and Wardrobe Department

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Gilbert Clark ... wardrobe (uncredited)
Mary Hallett ... wardrobe (uncredited)
Maurice Leloir ... wardrobe supervisor (uncredited)

Music Department

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James Fitzpatrick ... music contractor (1999)
Ludo Philipp ... conductor
Joe Brunnell ... singer: second tenor (uncredited)
Hugo Riesenfeld ... choral director (uncredited)
Vinton Vernon ... music recordist (uncredited)

Additional Crew

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Walter Pallman ... technical effects
Jules Schwerin ... production assistant
Charles Lewis ... production assistant (uncredited)
Willard M. Reineck ... technical director (uncredited)
Arthur Woods ... research director (uncredited)
Crew believed to be complete

Production Companies

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Distributors

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Special Effects

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Other Companies

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Storyline

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Plot Summary

King Louis XIII of France is thrilled when his son is born--an heir to the throne. But his Queen has actually delivered twin boys. Cardinal Richelieu sees the second son as a potential for revolution, and has him sent off to Spain to be raised in secret to ensure a peaceful future for France. Alas, keeping the secret means sending Constance, lover of D'Artagnan, off to a convent. D'Artagnan hears of this and rallies the Musketeers in a bid to rescue her. Unfortunately, Richelieu outsmarts the Musketeers and banishes them forever. Richelieu enlists D'Artagnan to look after and protect the young prince. Meanwhile, de Rochefort learns of the twins and Richelieu's plans, and kidnaps the twin, raising him in secret. Many years later, with Richelieu dead and the young prince crowned King Louis XIV, Rochefort launches his plan. The king is kidnapped, replaced with his twin, put in an iron mask so as not to be recognized, and led off to a remote castle to be held prisoner. Louis XIV is able to alert D'Artagnan, who realizes that only his friends Athos, Porthos, and Aramis can help him, so he reunites the Musketeers to derail Rochefort's nefarious plot but at a heavy toll. Written by Theron Trowbridge

Plot Keywords
Taglines DEBONAIR DAREDEVIL! SWASHBUCKLER SWORDSMAN! (1953 Rerelease) See more »
Genres
Parents Guide Add content advisory for parents »
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Additional Details

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Also Known As
  • Le masque de fer (France)
  • Die eiserne Maske (Germany)
  • Der Mann mit der eisernen Maske (Germany)
  • La máscara de hierro (Spain)
  • La maschera di ferro (Italy)
  • See more »
Runtime
  • 95 min
Country
Language
Color
Aspect Ratio
Sound Mix
Filming Locations

Did You Know?

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Trivia In the prologue the four musketeers stand in a framing device, as a medieval stage booth, and D'Artagnan steps forward and speaks to the audience, then steps back and resumes his position with the other three, who remained motionless; after the mid-point intermission, the same situation is repeated, with D'Artagnan speaking again to the audience, finishing with the words, "once more, once more . . . ", after which the film resumes with the title card "20 years later". These were the first lines of dialogue ever spoken on film by Douglas Fairbanks, in his last silent film. See more »
Goofs The iron-masked King languishes in his tower prison and notices a fisherman in the sea below. He quickly scratches a message on a pewter platter and tosses it out of the window to the rocks below. The fisherman picks up the place and READS the message - at that time in history the (oppressed) French working class were illiterate. See more »
Movie Connections Featured in Hollywood (1980). See more »
Soundtracks One for All, All for One See more »
Quotes Porthos: Come on! There is greater adventure beyond.
See more »

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