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The Prisoner of Zenda Poster

The Prisoner of Zenda

The most thrilling swordfight ever filmed...
1937 | 101m | English

(5353 votes)

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Popularity: 2 (history)

Details

A kingdom's ascending heir, marked for assassination, switches identities with a lookalike, who takes his place at the coronation. When the real king is kidnapped, his followers try to find him, while the stand-in falls in love with the king's intended bride, the beautiful Princess Flavia.
Release Date: Sep 03, 1937
Director: John Cromwell, W.S. Van Dyke, George Cukor
Writer: Anthony Hope, John L. Balderston, Ben Hecht, Edward E. Rose, Wells Root, Sidney Howard
Genres: Adventure, Drama, Romance
Keywords based on novel or book, kidnapping, coronation, castle, orient express, villain, kingdom, heir to the throne, royalty, unrequited love, treason, mistaken identity, king, swashbuckler, sword duel, identity swap, power struggle, train travel, fictitious country, draw bridge, monarch, evil brother, planned coup, 1890s, noble sacrifice, moat
Production Companies Selznick International Pictures
Box Office Revenue: $5,000,000
Budget: $1,250,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

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Backdrops

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Full Credits

Name Character
Ronald Colman Major Rudolf Rassendyll / The Prisoner of Zenda
Madeleine Carroll Princess Flavia
Douglas Fairbanks Jr. Rupert of Hentzau
Mary Astor Antoinette de Mauban
C. Aubrey Smith Colonel Zapt
David Niven Captain Fritz von Tarlenheim
Raymond Massey Black Michael
Montagu Love Detchard
Philip Sleeman Albert von Lauengram
Eleanor Wesselhoeft Frau Holf the Cook
Torben Meyer Max the Butler
Wilhelm von Brincken Krafstein (uncredited)
Ben Webster Lord Topham (uncredited)
Byron Foulger Johann (uncredited)
Charles K. French Bishop (uncredited)
Name Job
John Cromwell Director
Anthony Hope Novel
John L. Balderston Screenplay
Donald Ogden Stewart Dialogue, Additional Dialogue
James Wong Howe Director of Photography
Alfred Newman Original Music Composer
Ben Hecht Writer
W.S. Van Dyke Co-Director
George Cukor Co-Director
Hugo Friedhofer Orchestrator
Edward E. Rose Writer
Wells Root Adaptation
Bert Glennon Director of Photography
James E. Newcom Editor
Lyle R. Wheeler Art Direction
Ernest Dryden Costume Design
Oscar Lagerstrom Sound Recordist
Sidney Howard Writer
Fred Spencer Assistant Director
Casey Roberts Interior Designer
Jack Cosgrove Special Effects
Fred Cavens Stunts
Hal C. Kern Supervising Editor
Edward B. Powell Orchestrator
John M. Nickolaus Special Effects
Harry Redmond Jr. Special Effects
Sigvard Bernadotte Technical Advisor
William H. Wright Producer's Assistant
Russell Birdwell Publicist
Name Title
David O. Selznick Producer
Organization Category Person
Venice Film Festival Best Actor Ronald Colman Nominated
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 9 16 5
2024 5 16 22 11
2024 6 11 21 5
2024 7 10 19 4
2024 8 8 16 4
2024 9 6 10 3
2024 10 11 28 3
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2024 12 8 16 4
2025 1 7 12 4
2025 2 5 8 1
2025 3 3 7 1
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2025 6 1 2 1
2025 7 0 1 0
2025 8 0 1 0
2025 9 1 2 0
2025 10 1 2 0

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Reviews

Geronimo1967
7.0

Ronald Colman probably wishes he'd chosen another fishing venue as his "Maj. Rassendyll" arrives in the tiny kingdom of Ruritania just as it's king is about to be crowned. He might have suspected something when his border greeting seemed a bit formal, but a wander in the woods puts him face to face ... with the King - his doppelgänger if ever there was one. He is invited back to the hunting lodge for a glass or two and next thing he is rudely woken in the morning by the king's aide "Zapt" (Sir C. Aubrey Smith) and informed that the wine was drugged and nothing is going to wake the king anytime soon. Unless they are to allow his evil half-brother "Michael" (Raymond Massey) to ascend in his place then "Rudolph" is going to have to be a body double for the ceremony. With nerves wracking, he manages to get through the day but then they discover that the real king has now been kidnapped by his sibling and his own ruthless henchman "Rupert of Henzau" (Douglas Fairbanks Jr.) and the race is on to extricate the prisoner of Zenda and restore him to his throne. Just to add to the complications, the imposter is expected to court his soon-to-be bride the "Princess Flavia" (Madeleine Carroll) who has previously had little but disdain for her regal cousin. Once they've met, she doesn't have quite the same indifferent feelings about his stunt-double, nor he her, so with a bit of unwanted romance creeping into the plot poor old "Zapt" and his sidekick "Von Tarlenheim" (David Niven) have to walk quite a tightrope as they try to sort out this mess. Colman is on good form here as the honourable soldier and the rakish king and Fairbanks works well too as the devious baddie adept at the swordplay and some entertaining acrobatics. The last ten minutes concludes this enjoyable adventure quite excitingly with a bit of mischief and a deadly trap door... Great fun.

Jul 18, 2024