The Master of Ballantrae
90 min. / Technicolor / 1.37:1 / DTS-HD MA 2.0 MONO / SDH
Warner Archive Blu-ray $24.99
Available from Movie Zyng
Bonnie Prince Charlie is leading the Jacobite uprising from Scotland against British King George II, so what are the lairds to do – backing the wrong horse would lead to a forfeiture of fortune and lands. Felix Alymer has two stout sons, and a devious plot is hatched: one will fight for the Prince, t’other for the King, and whichever side wins, if they survive the victorious brother will pardon the other. A coin toss decides, and big brother Errol Flynn fights for the Prince, while little brother Anthony Steele goes to war for King George, which turns out to be the winning side, but Little Brother is in no mood to welcome Big Brother back into his rightful place as heir, so Errol takes it on the lam with a boisterous Irishman, Roger Livesey, as his pal. Barely escaping a hanging, they decide to become pirates (just like Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn!) and make their fortune, but the women at court have their own ideas, and no, the story isn’t as cohesive as one would wish: I think the expense of the production caused Warner Bros. to simply rip a couple of hundred pages out of the Robert Louis Stevenson book at random, and film what was left.
Confession: We are suckers in the Balcony for 1950s Technicolor adventure films, and Great Britain insisted that American film production companies kept their profits for local releases inside the country, so all the majors were making British films, generally with quite high production values, which we love. More a series of adventures than a consistent story, The Master of Ballantrae ends so well – probably Flynn’s most exciting film climax since The Adventures of Robin Hood – that the overall result is quite a swell picture, despite its disjointed narrative. The British cast is excellent, and you can’t miss Yvonne Furneaux of Hammer’s The Mummy as the woman scorned. Flynn is showing his age – this was his penultimate film for Warner Bros. – but he still has the riz, and doesn’t seem slower or older during the many action sequences. Kudos to William Keighley, who was retiring to Paris when he took this last assignment for Warners (he’d previously worked with Flynn several times, including The Adventures of Robin Hood, The Prince and the Pauper, and Rocky Mountain).
The color and image are terrific, per the usual from Warner Archive, but the sound didn’t impress us as much as we’re used to; it seemed a bit tame, and didn’t boom out of the speakers, even during the battle sequences. Source material issue? Anyway, the beauty of what we were watching and the almost non-stop action made up for it. Bonus material includes Bully for Bugs, with our favorite wabbit as a toreador, and Plop Goes the Weasel, a very funny cartoon with a drooling, hungry weasel after Foghorn Leghorn. Both were originally released in 1953, so who knows – they may well have played on the supporting program with our delightful feature presentation.