Enjoy the music from the film as you read the review:
20th Century Fox attempted to duplicate Warner's success
with Errol Flynn and The Adventures of Robin Hood by casting their
young contract player Tyrone Power in a swashbuckler. Fox even used three
of the cast members from Adventures of Robin Hood: Basil Rathbone as the villain, Eugene Pallette as the friar, and Montagu Love as
Diego's father. Montagu Love played the Abbott in Adventures of Robin
Hood. The Mark of Zorro was Power's first
swashbuckler. I grew up watching Guy Williams play Zorro (in the Disney
television series) and never thought I could enjoy anyone else
in the role, but Tyrone Power succeeds in this swashbuckling role. The
Mark of Zorro is a splendid costume adventure.
There are actually two villains in the story: the greedy Alcalde
(Governor), and Capitan Esteban Pasquale, a tyrant who wrings every centavo out of the peasants
hands, and who flirts with the Alcalde's wife Inez. He was a former fencing
instructor in Barcelona, who ended up in California because he had the
misfortune of killing a man of influence. Wearing thigh-high boots
and skin-tight white trousers, Esteban plays with his sword as he talks,
swishing it in the air and practicing his lunges. "Some men toy with their
canes, monocles or snuff boxes. I toy with my sword." Basil is
perfect as the Captain, even with a British
accent instead of a Spanish one. He is deliciously wicked. This role was
also Rathbone's last classic swashbuckling villain role.
Rathbone and Gale Sondergaard
J. Edward Bromberg and Rathbone
Gale Sondergaard (The Spider Woman) is perfectly cast as Inez
Quintero, the bored wife of the Alcalde. She is enamored with Don Diego
Vega, a
new face in Los Angeles, newly arrived from Madrid. Diego has been
summoned home to California by his father.
There he finds that his father is no longer Alcalde of Los Angeles, having
been replaced by Don Luis Quintero. Diego's father had hoped that Diego
could lead the caballeros against the despots, but Diego believes they are
outnumbered and fears they would lose. Posing as a fop, Diego convinces
everyone that he is no threat to the status quo, but disguised as Zorro he
steals from the rich and gives to the poor (shades of Robin Hood). Zorro
enlists the padre's help to dispense money to the poor.
Zorro takes the tax money.
He was HERE! In this very room!
Although he doesn't know Zorro's identity, Capt. Esteban
Pasquale suspects that Zorro is one of the caballeros. Believing that an
alliance with the caballeros will prevent trouble, Esteban schemes with
Quintero to arrange a marriage between his beautiful niece Lolita and Don
Diego Vega. Lolita, played by ravishing, dark-eyed beauty Linda Darnell,
is in love with Zorro, and Don Diego reveals his secret to her.
Later Esteban discovers the stolen money in the padre's
possession. He arrests the padre, knowing it will force Zorro to act.
Diego pays a visit to Quintero and has just about frightened him into
signing his resignation when Esteban interrupts. Diego goads Esteban into
a duel and kills him. Quintero figures out that Diego is Zorro and arrests
him. Through trickery, Diego escapes and leads the people to overthrow the
government.
The climactic fencing scene between Diego and
Esteban is parodied in The
Court Jester. When Esteban and Diego are about to duel, Esteban slices the top
off of a candle with his sword. Tyrone also swipes at a candle with his sword but it
appears as though he missed it. Esteban laughs and then Diego lifts the top of the candle
off to show that he had sliced it so cleanly that the top hadn't fallen off. The
dueling scene between Rathbone and Danny Kaye in The Court
Jester was similar except that Danny Kaye sliced through a row of seven candles. When Rathbone
laughed at him, Kaye turned his head and blew in the direction of the candles, and the
tops fell off!
Power:
"The capitan's blade is not so firm."
Rathbone: "Still firm
enough to run you through."
Esteban laughs at Diego's attempt to slice the
candle.
Superb choreography by Fred Cavens can be enjoyed in
the exhilarating dance with Lolita and Diego, and in the spectacular duel
between Diego and Esteban. There is no grand staircase or knocking over
furniture as in "Adventures of Robin Hood," but the duel is well
staged, ending with Esteban run through and revealing the "Z"
on the wall as he slides down the wall, dying. Rathbone was very skilled at fencing,
having taken lessons since the age of eighteen. Power was extensively doubled in the duel by Albert Cavens,
the son of choreographer Fred Cavens. Cavens also choreographed the duels
between Rathbone and Errol Flynn in Captain Blood and
The Adventures of Robin Hood.
Basil
Rathbone...Capt. Esteban Pasquale
Tyrone Power......Zorro/Don Diego Vega
Linda Darnell.....................Lolita Quintero
Gale Sondergaard................Inez Quintero
Eugene Pallette.........................Fray Felipe
J. Edward Bromberg....Don Luis Quintero
Montagu Love.........Don Alejandro Vega
Janet Beecher...........Señora Isabella Vega
Robert Lowery...............................Rodrigo
Chris-Pin Martin...........................Turnkey
George Regas.......................Sgt. Gonzalez
Belle Mitchell.....................................Maria
John Bleifer........................................Pedro
Production
Co. ................20th Cent. Fox
Producer.......................Raymond Griffith
Director....................Rouben Mamoulian
Screenplay................John Taintor Foote,
.....................Garrett Fort, Bess Meredyth
(based on the novel The Curse of Capistrano by Johnston
McCulley)
Cinematographer................Arthur Miller
Editor...............................Robert Bischoff
Music Composer............Alfred Newman
Music Director................Alfred Newman
Art Directors.........................Richard Day
.......................................Joseph C. Wright
Set Decorator......................Thomas Little
Costume Design...............Travis Banton
Choreographer.....................Fred Cavens