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1939 • Adventure / Drama • 112m

Beau Geste

"Thundering drama!"

70

CINESCORE

FRESH

110 critic reviews

72%

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Brothers Beau, John and Digby Geste join the Foreign Legion, where they fall under the rule of tyrannical Sergeant Markoff. Beau and John are assigned to Fort Zinderneuf, where Markoff tries to break their spirit, aware of a dark family secret concerning a fabulous jewel one of them carries. As tensions rise, Arabs attack the fort and rivalries must be thrown aside in a desperate battle for life.

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Top Cast

Gary Cooper
Gary Cooper
Beau Geste
Ray Milland
Ray Milland
John Geste
Robert Preston
Robert Preston
Digby Geste
Brian Donlevy
Brian Donlevy
Sergeant Markoff
Susan Hayward
Susan Hayward
Isobel Rivers
J. Carrol Naish
J. Carrol Naish
Rasinoff
Albert Dekker
Albert Dekker
Schwartz
Broderick Crawford
Broderick Crawford
Hank Miller
Charles Barton
Charles Barton
Buddy McMonigal
James Stephenson
James Stephenson
Major Henri de Beaujolais
Heather Thatcher
Heather Thatcher
Lady Patricia Brandon
James Burke
James Burke
Lieutenant Dufour
G.P. Huntley
G.P. Huntley
Augustus Brandon
Harold Huber
Harold Huber
Voisin
Donald O'Connor
Donald O'Connor
Beau Geste (as a Child)
Billy Cook
Billy Cook
John Geste (as a Child)
Martin Spellman
Martin Spellman
Digby Geste (as a Child)
Ann Gillis
Ann Gillis
Isobel Rivers (as a Child)
Director: William A. WellmanProducer: William A. WellmanExecutive Producer: William LeBaronScreenplay: Robert Carson

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Reviews

John Chard
2019-01-05
90%

Wonderful, just blooming wonderful. Gary Cooper, Ray Milland and Robert Preston play three orphaned brothers who are raised at Brandon Abbas by their aunt Lady Patricia Brandon. When money troubles hit the household, attention focuses on the Blue Water Sapphire, the last remaining wealth in the Brandon estate. The sapphire disappears and is thought to have been stolen, fleeing the scandal, the brothers follow each other into the Foreign Legion, where at Fort Zinderneuf they encounter sadistic Sgt. Markoff and face a test of their respective courage, honour and loyalty. Beau Geste is a truly classic picture, directed by the highly talented William A Wellman, it combines all the elements needed to entertain across the board. Heroes and villains, battles ahoy, potential mutiny and a mystery at its heart, all combine here to flesh out a ripper of an adventure picture. The actors all perform excellently, with a special mention for Brian Donlevy as the nasty Markoff, it's a truly frightening and bully like characterisation, while a nod of approval goes to Susan Hayward appearing in one of her first pictures. The art direction from Hans Dreier & Robert Odell was rightly nominated for an Academy Award and Alfred Newman's score flows seamlessly within the films fluctuating story. So many wonderful scenes to enjoy, watching the boys (and girl) as children playing Admirals is just wonderful, and sets us up a treat for the films emotive last reel - it's a masterstroke of story telling to observe the innocence of youth surrounded by staunch loyalty. Then there are all the sequences at Fort Zinderneuf, where the boys are now men of stature, but still they have that mystery baggage in their past to carry around with them, this makes for an involving viewing experience as the tests are thrown at them. As this is 1939 the film fails to give us any insight as to why the enemy is the enemy, the Tuaregs are merely the aggressors of the piece, but to over analyse and be critical there would be churlish. For Beau Geste is something of an action adventure leading light, it is in fact, a Beautiful Gesture indeed. 9/10

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Details

Status
Released
Origin
US
Languages
English, Arabic, Hungarian
Studios
Paramount Pictures

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