The main achievement of Martin Bourboulon's film is to reconnect us with the pleasures of a good story, well told. Dumas gave screenwriters Matthieu Delaporte and Alexandre de La Patellière the gift of a great opening: D'Artagnan pissing off all three Musketeers on his way into Paris and having to schedule successive duels with each. (It's the kind of meet-cute for which romcom writers would put an épée through someone.) Care, too, has been taken to differentiate between its swordsmen. Vincent Cassel plays Athos as a tortured old soak, stuck behind bars for much of Part 1, having been framed for murder; Romain Duris, typically vulpine, is a womanising dandy Aramis; and Pio Marmaï an openly bisexual, broadly companionable Porthos who insists "a thigh is a thigh". Running rings around them all in this first instalment: Eva Green, apparently channelling Musidora as Milady, forever shifting shape and burying items in her voluminous cleavage. There's an argument that earlier adaptations did rather better at parsing and streamlining the roster of supporting players, and there really are only so many ways a director can shoot a swordfight. (The action peaks early with a handheld approximation of a one-shot, doubtless requiring some digital trickery, which bears the influence of the Bourne movies and Roger Deakins' work on 1917.) What you're mostly watching here is the construction of a well-timbered machine that rolls along at moderate-to-fast pace, dispensing narrative with a modicum of style and unquestionable assurance. It's got Bank Holiday - or l'équivalent français - written all over it, but for the time being, you feel the text has been set down in honourable hands. Part 2: Milady opens in France later this year.
The Three Musketeers Part 1: D'Artagnan is now playing in selected cinemas.
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