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The Duellists
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The Duellists (1977) More at IMDbPro »

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Overview

User Rating:
7.4/10   5,638 votes
MOVIEmeter: ?
Down 8% in popularity this week. See why on IMDbPro.
Director:
Writers:
Contact:
View company contact information for The Duellists on IMDbPro.
Release Date:
31 August 1977 (France) more
Genre:
Tagline:
Fencing is a science. Loving is a passion. Duelling is an obsession.
Plot:
Set during the grand, sweeping Napoleonic age, an officer in the French army insults another officer and sets off a life-long emnity... more | full synopsis
Awards:
Nominated for 2 BAFTA Film Awards. Another 2 wins & 2 nominations more
NewsDesk:
(4 articles)
Movie Alert! Four Back-to-back Winners On TCM Tonight
 (From CinemaRetro. 7 November 2009, 2:09 AM, PST)

Horror Plus Sci-Fi: Alien
 (From Screen Rant. 10 October 2009, 8:06 AM, PDT)

User Reviews:
The Casting Of A Perfect Shadow more (73 total)

Cast

  (in credits order) (verified as complete)

Keith Carradine ... D'Hubert

Harvey Keitel ... Feraud

Albert Finney ... Fouche
Edward Fox ... Colonel
Cristina Raines ... Adele
Robert Stephens ... Gen. Treillard
Tom Conti ... Dr. Jacquin
John McEnery ... Chevalier
Diana Quick ... Laura
Alun Armstrong ... Lacourbe
Maurice Colbourne ... Second
Gay Hamilton ... Maid
Meg Wynn Owen ... Leonie
Jenny Runacre ... Mme. de Lionne
Alan Webb ... Chevalier
Arthur Dignam ... Eyepatch Wearer
Matthew Guinness ... Feraud's Combatant
Dave Hill
Neville Jason ... Wedding Party Guest
Timothy Penrose

William Morgan Sheppard ... The fencing master (as Morgan Sheppard)
Liz Smith ... Woman reading tarot cards
Anthony Douse
Hugh Fraser
Richard Graydon ... Cossack / Hussar
Tim Hardy
William Hobbs
Michael Irving
Tony Mathews

Pete Postlethwaite ... Man shaving Gen. Treillard (as Peter Postlethwaite)
Jason Scott
Luke Scott
Stacy Keach ... Narrator (voice)
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Directed by
Ridley Scott 
 
Writing credits
(in alphabetical order)
Joseph Conrad  story "The Duel"
Gerald Vaughan-Hughes  writer

Produced by
Ivor Powell .... associate producer
David Puttnam .... producer
 
Original Music by
Howard Blake 
 
Cinematography by
Frank Tidy 
 
Film Editing by
Pamela Power 
 
Casting by
Mary Selway 
 
Production Design by
Peter J. Hampton 
 
Art Direction by
Bryan Graves 
 
Costume Design by
Tom Rand 
 
Makeup Department
Susan Barradell .... makeup supervisor
Elaine Carew .... makeup assistant
Paul Nix .... hair style consultant
Sheila Thomas .... hairdresser assistant
 
Production Management
Peter Jaques .... production manager: London
 
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
Patricia Eberhard .... second assistant director: France
Peter Kohn .... third assistant director
Terry Marcel .... first assistant director
David Wimbury .... second assistant director
 
Art Department
Les Benson .... dressing props
Richard Dicker .... drapesman
Maria Dumas .... art assistant
Mike Fowlie .... prop master
Brian Higgins .... carpenter
John Hogan .... dressing props
Pat Hughes .... dressing props
John Lanzer .... prop buyer
Ann Mollo .... set dresser
Ted Stickley .... stand-by prop
Arthur Wicks .... dressing props
 
Sound Department
Bill Burgess .... sound boom
Derrick Leather .... sound mixer
Terry Rawlings .... dubbing editor
Joe Ryan .... sound camera
Hugh Strain .... dubbing mixer
 
Special Effects by
John Burgess .... special effects
 
Camera and Electrical Department
David Appleby .... still photographer
Steve Barron .... clapper loader (as Stephen Barron)
Adrian Biddle .... camera focus
Ray Hall .... grip
Hugh Johnson .... clapper loader
Gary Mullins .... sparks
Ridley Scott .... camera operator
Al Watson .... gaffer
 
Casting Department
Lily van Rijs .... casting: France (as Lily Van Rijs)
 
Costume and Wardrobe Department
James Wakely .... wardrobe master
Rita Wakely .... wardrobe mistress
 
Editorial Department
Michael Bradsell .... supervising editor
Roy Burge .... assistant editor
Les Healey .... assistant editor
Peter Hollywood .... assistant editor
 
Music Department
Howard Blake .... conductor
John Richards .... music mixer
 
Transportation Department
Con Lewis .... unit driver
 
Other crew
Matthew Binns .... runner
Paul Cadiou .... production accountant
Clinton Cavers .... location consultant: Scotland
Guilhaine Cosse .... secretary: France
Mike Dempsey .... title designer
Olga Farel .... location manager: France
Kay Fenton .... continuity
Richard Graydon .... horse master
William Hobbs .... fight director
Richard Holmes .... military advisor
Isabelle Kloucowsky .... titles: french
Steve Lincoln .... runner
Gil Mead .... production assistant
Nicole Miloux .... assistant accountant: France
Sean O'Brien .... assistant accountant: London
Carolyn Pfeiffer .... production associate
Noelle Simpson .... production liaison
Lynda Smith .... secretary to producer
Terence Thomson .... second spark
Jean-François Villemer .... assistant location manager: France
Steve Hancock .... projectionist (uncredited)
 
Crew believed to be complete


Production CompaniesDistributorsOther Companies
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Additional Details

Also Known As:
Duel (UK) (working title)
more
Runtime:
100 min
Country:
Language:
Color:
Aspect Ratio:
1.37 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
Filming Locations:

Fun Stuff

Trivia:
According to director Ridley Scott, Paramount gave him a list of four actors to choose from for the two leads, which he had to agree to in order to receive financing. Scott selected Carradine and Keitel, then spent several months trying to convince them to accept the roles. more
Goofs:
Continuity: In the opening scene, Harvey Keitel's character's sword strikes home in the upper chest (near the heart) of his opponent, then the film cuts to a side view of the opponent depicting the sword as having entered his stomach area. more
Quotes:
[first lines]
Narrator: The duellist demands satisfaction. Honour, for him, is an appetite. This story is about an eccentric kind of hunger. It is a true story and begins in the year that Napoleon Bonaparte became ruler of France.
more
Movie Connections:
Referenced in Cinéman (2009) more
Soundtrack:
Bist du bei mir more

FAQ

What is the location of the castle ruin at which David Carradine and Harvey Keitel fight their final pistol duel?
more
41 out of 46 people found the following review useful.
The Casting Of A Perfect Shadow, 16 April 2003
Author: Ulrich Fehlauer (schogger13@t-online.de) from Lemgo / Germany

The Duellists is remarkable in lots of ways. For one, it's a masterpiece debut. It's also one of the very rare films putting a director on the map who keeps delivering what the debut already displayed in abundance. What's more, it is even rarer in so far that this movie hasn't aged a single day, which can't be explained away with the fact that it's a period piece. It stands the test of time as flawlessly as two other legendary debuts, Orson Welles's Citisen Kane and John Huston's Maltese Falcon. The flipside displays a mystery. The Duellists is an almost totally unknown film. To this day it hasn't earned what it had cost to make it in 1977: 900.000$. That, without doubt, makes it the most underrated masterpiece by one of THE directors of his generation.

The basis was simple and commanding: The adaptation of the classic Joseph Conrad story 'The Duel'. The result is a lesson in perfect cinematic storytelling. And it's also a lesson in the forgotten art of low budget moviemaking. Not a single frame suggests that 'more' would've been better. The required economy of every single aspect of production always finds its perfect answer in the execution of the story. What you can't see or hear doesn't need to be there. It's as simple as that. Suffice to say, Ridley Scott being the director he is, The Duellists is visually superb and at the same time devoid of a single frame just being there to look good. His visual style is completely dependent on the substance of the story as well as the acting. That becomes blindingly obvious in his weaker films, where he resorts to 'beautifying' an empty shell. No other great director is as much a slave of the story's quality, before he can become its master. But once a strong moment, a powerful dialogue, a strong character hits his senses, he 'translates' their life into his unique visual language. In that he is almost without comparison. What we sometimes later perceive as only beautiful is always as essential to the story as a note in a symphony is essential to the next one to make 'sense'. The almost hauntingly arcadian, rural opening shot of the movie is a perfect example. The little girl with her geese leads us through innocence and peace across the screen... and bumps with us into the towering Husar blocking the path. No words. Just eyes making the girl lead her geese away from the path, away from what the Husar is guarding against unwanted onlookers. We're already hooked into the story on more than one level, and the cut to the duellists on the open field tells us where paradise ends. That's Ridley Scott in his purest form. The beauty of his style is in fact visual drama, and the power of his language is as visible now as it was in 1977. In 'Gladiator', watch the transition from Maximus's cornfild dream to the tortured earth of the battlefield in Germania and you'll see what I mean. That's why Scott is also an actor's director. He always makes sense to them and the characters with every move of the camera and sets them in the best possible light for what's required. He likes good actors, which isn't as normal as one might think. There isn't a hollow second to be found in each and every performance on The Duellists. That the casting is flawless down to the last extra helped, of course. All this explains much of the ageless quality of the movie. No hollow set pieces to 'jazz it up a bit'. Only authentic locations and no built sets. Costumes, makeup, props... everything totally convincing and fitting to the period. It's virtually impossible to determine the movie's age without knowing the actors. Scott turned an ageless story into an ageless movie. An excellent script and extremely good acting all round helped him do it.

For me The Duellists is the first of 3 consecutive masterpieces (the other two are, of course ALIEN and Blade Runner), unrivalled since John Huston's first 3 films.

10 out of 10 Ulrich Fehlauer

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