Les Trois Mousquetaires est un film français en 2 parties (La Haine de Richelieu et Le Triomphe de d'Artagnan) de André Calmettes et Henri Pouctal, sorti en 1912.
, 18minutes Directed byAndré Calmettes OriginFrance GenresDrama, Historical ThemesHistoire de France ActorsAlbert Lambert, Gabrielle Robinne, Berthe Bovy, Albert Dieudonné, Raphaël Duflos, Charles Lorrain Rating55% Lasting longer than was then usual, about 15 minutes, the film more or less accurately depicts the events of the day in 1588 when King Henri III (played by co-director Le Bargy) summoned his powerful rival, Duke Henri de Guise, to his chambers at the Château de Blois and had him brutally murdered. The film has its share of lurid thrills, and the pacing is quick throughout, with better acting than most films of the time, and staged in a somewhat theatrical manner.
Rome, June 17, 1800, shortly after the French victory at Marengo. Floria Tosca, a famous opera singer Mario Cavaradossi's lover, a young painter and Bonapartist sympathizer. The latter causes the ire of Baron Scarpia, the ruthless police chief and scorned lovers of Tosca, Angelotti escape by the Leader of the Opposition, and hiding his mistress. Scarpia and Cavaradossi stops condemned to be shot at Castel Sant'Angelo. Tosca begs for mercy. Scarpia agrees to replace the bullets of the firing squad if she agrees to become his mistress. She pretends to accept, but soon the baron he gave the order to save Mario she stabs him to death. What she ignores is that Scarpia had waved to the officer came to him orders meaning that it was a decoy for sleep Tosca. When it discovers that Mario had indeed been shot, she jumps off the parapet of the castle.