King of Hearts (1967)



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Synopsis:
The French/Italian/British King of Hearts (Le Roi de Coeur) takes place during World War I, but it might as well have been the Vietnamese conflict so far as its youthful "core" audience was concerned. Overacting outrageously, Adolfo Celi plays British colonel Alexander MacBibenbrook, who orders mild-mannered Scotsman Pvt. Charles Plumpick (Alan Bates) to undertake a life-or-death mission in a tiny French village. While evacuating the town, the Germans have left behind a time bomb that will explode at midnight; Plumpick must defuse that bomb. Upon his arrival in town, Plumpick discovers that it is far from deserted. A group of inmates from the local insane asylum, left behind during the evacuation, have claimed the village for their own. Knocked unconscious, Plumpick awakens to learn that he has been crowned "King of Hearts" by the gentle lunatics. None of the inmates pay any heed to Plumpick's warnings about impending doom, and when he attempts to lead them out of town, they are terrified at the prospect and scurry back to the "safety" of the village. Plumpick is finally able to render the bomb useless, whereupon the grateful inmates decide to stage a three-year celebration. When Plumpick tries to leave, he is kidnapped by the loonies at the behest of beautiful inmate Coquelicot (Geneviève Bujold), who has fallen in love with him. Bound and gagged, Plumpick watches helplessly as the Germans and the British troops kill each other off in comic-opera fashion. Finally set free, Plumpick weighs the horrible insanity of war against the more benign brand of lunacy represented by the inmates. The final image -- of a nude Plumpick carrying a birdcage, knocking on the doors of the asylum, and demanding that he be "accepted" -- was reproduced for the print ads of King of Hearts, effectively giving away the ending. An essential "date" film of the 1970s, King of Hearts was often released to campus movie houses in tandem with a pair of cult-favorite short subjects, the animated Bambi Meets Godzilla and Lenny Bruce's Thank You Masked Man.

~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Full Cast & Crew

Theatrical Release
6/19/1967
Director Credit
Philippe de Broca Director
Cast Credit
Daniel Boulanger Col. Helmut Von Krack
Pier Paolo Capponi
Marc Dudicourt Lt. Hamburger
Palau Alberic
Jacques Balutin Mac Fish
Adolfo Celi Col. Alexander MacBibenbrook
Sir Alan Bates Pvt. Charles Plumpick
Geneviève Bujold Coquelicot
Jean-Claude Brialy The Duke--Le Duc de Trefle
Julien Guiomar Bishop Daisy--Monseigneur Marguerite
Pierre Brasseur Gen. Geranium
Micheline Prelle Mme. Eglantine
Michel Serrault Hairdresser
Françoise Christophe The Duchess
Production Credits Credit
Philippe de Broca Producer
Art Department Credit
Robert Christides Set Designer
Francois de Lamothe Art Director
Film Camera Credit
Pierre Lhomme Cinematographer
Wardrobe Hair Makeup Credit
Jacques Fonteray Costume Designer



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