Eagle in a Cage is an Anglo-American historical drama film, released in 1971.

Eagle in a Cage
Directed byFielder Cook
Written byMillard Lampell
Based onteleplay by Lampell
Produced byMillard Lampell
Albert Schwartz
StarringJohn Gielgud
CinematographyFrano Vodopivec
Edited byMax Benedict
Music byMarc Wilkinson
Production
companies
Group W Productions
Ramona Productions
Distributed byNational General Pictures
Release dates
  • 22 December 1971 (1971-12-22) (Los Angeles)
  • March 1973 (1973-03) (UK)
Running time
103 minutes (UK)
98 minutes (U.S.)
CountriesUnited States
United Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

The film was based on the teleplay of the same name by Millard Lampell, which aired on the Hallmark Television Playhouse on 20 October 1965.

Plot summary edit

After his defeat at the Battle of Waterloo and surrender to the British Empire, Napoleon Bonaparte is delivered into exile and imprisonment on St. Helena, setting the scene for a psychological character study of the fallen Emperor and those upon the island with him as he rakes over the ashes of his career. After a failed escape attempt, the British Government offers him a chance for a return to limited power in France once again as a buffer against instability there; however, on the point of departure he is afflicted by the symptoms of stomach cancer and the offer is in consequence withdrawn, leaving him entrapped on the island and exiting history's stage.

Cast edit

1965 Television Play edit

Lamprell had written an episode of East Side, West Side that was admired by George Schaefer, producer of Hallmark's Hall of Fame. He commissioned Lamprell to write an original script. The play aired in 1965 starring Trevor Howard as Napleon and Pamela Franklin as Betsy.[1]

Howard, Lamprell, and Franklin were nominated for Emmies. Lamprell won. When he accepted it he said "I think I ought to mention that I was blacklisted." This led to the New York Times offering Lamprell the chance to write an article about the blacklist. The incident is credited as helping draw mainstream public attention to the existence of the blacklist and contributing to its end.[2][3]

Production edit

Howard Barnes, an executive for Group W who knew Lamprell in radio, contacted the author suggesting his television play would make an ideal film and they had an investor willing to put up half the money. Lamprell said his adaptation "meant really rewriting pretty much everything, because there’s such a vast difference between what works on television and what works as a theatrical feature." The other financier fell through but Group W agreed to fully finance if Lamprell agreed to produce.[4]

Lamprell wrote the part of the black general specifically for Moses Gunn who had been in a play of his, Hard Traveling. " There were actually black generals in Napoleon’s army, from Haiti and elsewhere, although not with Napoleon on St. Helena," said Lamprell.[5]

The original plan was to film in Italy but this proved too expensive so the film was shot in Yugoslavia.[6]

Reception edit

Lamprell later thought, "Gielgud was wonderful, so was Richardson, so was Billie. Kenneth Haigh, who was a talented actor, just wasn’t up to the part of Napoleon, however, and that hurt the film."[7]

The New York Times wrote "It should be obvious that the film-maker's imagination working at this level will create roles to tax the most imaginative of actors. But from his awesome cast, with a few exceptions, what he generally gets is a fairly professional elaboration of clichés."[8]

Variety called it "a dramatically fascinating entry for the class market."[9] The Los Angeles Times said it was "completely involving."[10]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Lamprell, Millard (1967). "Blacklisted". Vol. 1, no. 5. p. 15. {{cite magazine}}: Cite magazine requires |magazine= (help)
  2. ^ Buhle, Paul (2003). Blacklisted : the film-lover's guide to the Hollywood blacklist. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 64.
  3. ^ “I Think I Ought to Mention I Was Blacklisted,” by Millard Lampell, The New York Times, August 21, 1966:
  4. ^ McGilligan p 401
  5. ^ McGilligan p 402
  6. ^ McGilligan p 402
  7. ^ McGilligan p 402
  8. ^ Greenspun, Roger (10 January 1972). "' Eagle in a Cage':Exile of Napoleon Is Subject of Romance".
  9. ^ Variety Reviews 1971-74. 1983. p. 176.
  10. ^ Thomas, Kevin (23 December 1971). "Down, Out with Napoleon". The Los Angeles Times. p. 47.

Notes edit

External links edit