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Juarez
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Synopsis
Juarez was originally designed to concentrate almost exclusively on the tragedy of Hapsburg Emperor Maximillian, whose attempts to establish a puppet government in Mexico on behalf of Napoleon III ended in disaster and death. But when Paul Muni decided that he wanted to play Zapotec-Indian-turned-Mexican President Benito Pablo Juarez, the film's emphasis perceptibly shifted -- and Bette Davis, cast as Empress Carlotta, was shunted to second billing rather than first. Muni's makeup and costuming convincingly transforms him into Juarez incarnate. But unlike his other historical impersonations (Pasteur, Zola), Muni's Juarez is a one-note characterization: stoic, uncompromising, and v-e-e-r-y slow of speech. Far more exciting dramatically is Bette Davis as Empress Carlotta, whose highly stylized descent into madness is a tour de force both for the actress and for director William Dieterle. Claude Rains and Gale Sondergaard, as Napoleon III and Empress Eugenie, in essence repeat their diabolical characterizations from Anthony Adverse (1936), while John Garfield is singularly miscast as Pofirio Diaz. The best performance is delivered by Brian Aherne, whose kindly, honorable Emperor Maximillian is less a despot than a misguided political pawn. When Aherne, about to be executed at Juarez' orders, requests that his favorite Mexican song "La Paloma" be played as he is led before the firing squad, audience sympathies are 100% in Maximilian's corner--which was not quite what the filmmakers intended. Based largely on Bertita Harding's book The Phantom Crown (the film's original title), Juarez takes every available opportunity to parallel its title character's fight against foreign intervention with the then-current European situation. To protect their investment in Juarez Warner Bros. purchased outright a like-vintage Mexican film on the same subject, The Mad Empress, suppressing the latter film's release in the United States. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Cast

Brian Aherne Emperor Maximilian von Habsburg
Egon Brecher Baron von Magnus
Monte Blue Lerdo de Tejada
Georgia Caine Countess Battenberg
Louis Calhern LeMarc
Gennaro Curci Senor de Leon
Bette Davis Empress Carlota von Habsburg
Carlos de Valdez Tailor
William Edmunds Italian Minister
Walter Fenner Achille Fould
Martin Garralaga Negroni
Charles Halton Mr. Roberts
Holmes Herbert Marshall Randon
Noble Johnson Regules
Walter Kingsford Prince Metternich
Mickey Kuhn Augustin Iturbide
Frank Lackteen Coachman
Alexander Leftwich Drouyn de Lhuys
Fred Malatesta Senor Salas
John Miljan Mariano Escobedo
Grant Mitchell Mr. Harris
Paul Muni Benito Pablo Juarez
Henry O'Neill Miguel Miramon
Claude Rains Louis Napoleon
Frank Reicher Duc de Morny
Gilbert Roland Col. Miguel Lopez
Vladimir Sokoloff Camilo
Gale Sondergaard Empress Eugenie
Hugh Sothern John Bigelow
Walter O. Stahl Senator del Valle
Donald Crisp Marechal Bazaine
Irving Pichel Carbajal
Robert Warwick Maj. DuPont
John Garfield Porfirio Diaz
Lillian Nicholson Josefa Iturbide

Production Crew

Bertita Harding Book Author
Tony Gaudio Cinematographer
Erich Wolfgang Korngold Composer (Music Score)
Orry-Kelly Costume Designer
William Dieterle Director
Warren Low Editor
Leo F. Forbstein Musical Direction/Supervision
Franz Werfel Play Author
Hal B. Wallis Producer
Henry Blanke Producer
Anton Grot Production Designer
Aeneas MacKenzie Screenwriter
John Huston Screenwriter
Wolfgang Reinhardt Screenwriter
Year: 1939
Runtime: 132
Country: USA
MPAA Rating:
Category: Feature


Produced by
Franco London Films
Warner Brothers

Awards
1939 - 10 Best Films - Film Daily
1939 - 10 Best Films - New York Times