The Master Of Ballantrae Full Movie Download In Hindi

The Master Of Ballantrae Full Movie Download In Hindi

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The Master Of Ballantrae Full Movie Download In Hindi

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Two noble Scottish brothers deliberately take opposite sides when Bonnie Prince Charlie returns to claim the throne of Scotland in order to preserve the family fortune.
When Bonnie Prince Charlie, heir to the Stuart throne, returns to Scotland to liberate his land from English rule, both Jamie and Henry Durie are keen to fight for their independence. They compromise however deciding that while one of them will fight, the other will remain at home remaining loyal to the English throne thereby protecting their lands and estates. The dashing Jamie wins the coin toss and sets off wearing the white cockade, the symbol of the rebellion. After the Battle of Culloden however, the Scots are defeated and a wounded Jamie, accompanied by his new friend Irishman Francis Burke, find themselves on board a smugglers ship headed to the West Indies. When they are attacked by pirates, Jamie finds himself a member of pirate Captain Anaud's crew. For Jamie however, he dreams of returning home to the beautiful Alison.
&quot;The Master of Ballantrae&quot; is no &quot;Adventures of Robin Hood,&quot; but it&#39;s entertaining and fast paced.<br/><br/>The color photography is lovely, and Errol Flynn is still charismatic even if he&#39;s a bit older and less agile.<br/><br/>Roger Livesey as Flynn&#39;s sidekick is the best part of the movie as far as I&#39;m concerned, and most of the best lines were given to him. Check out the Memorable Quotes section to see what I mean.<br/><br/>Had the two of them been paired in a really good vehicle, I&#39;m sure the results would have been awesome. As it is, it&#39;s still better than average and a pleasant way to pass a couple of hours.
The Master of Ballantrae just might have worked as a sprawling period swashbuckler if...the Master of Ballantrae, the eldest son of the laird of Clan Durie who fights for Bonnie Prince Charlie and loses, hadn&#39;t been such a self-centered clod who let his love of gold, wenches and adventure get in the way of honor, wisdom and trust, and if...Errol Flynn had been ten years younger. At 44, he looks 54, and often a puffy and tired 54 at that. If he were younger, he might have convinced us that the selfish and impetuous Jamie Durie would sometime soon in the movie find something honorable to do that would make us root for the romantic and dashing fellow. Looking in his mid-fifties, however, Flynn resembles an aging, petulant rake, and we know it&#39;s unlikely that there is any chance of a charming good guy emerging from the husk. <br/><br/>Robert Lewis Stevenson doesn&#39;t help. His Master is unredeemably and emotionally selfish, even though a dab hand with a sword, at piracy, with the ladies and with holding a grudge. No man in his right mind would place anyone he loves in the self-centered path of Jamie Durie. Flynn doesn&#39;t have much of a chance. It&#39;s clear Flynn&#39;s rapscallion, romantic, swashbuckling days have long gone by. <br/><br/>The story of the Master of Ballantrae bears some resemblance to Stevenson&#39;s novel. A toss of a coin determines that Jamie, the Master, will fight for the Stuart restoration when Charlie Stuart arrives from France to try to wrest the throne away from the Hanoverian King George II. As the elder brother, Jamie will inherit the Durie title and estates. The year is 1745. Jamie&#39;s younger brother, Henry (Anthony Steele), will support George. This way, whichever side wins, Clan Durie will have backed the winner. Henry is everything Jamie is not. He&#39;s conscientious, honorable and dull. And when Charlie loses, Jamie has to hightail it out of Scotland. Penniless, more or less, he encounters another rogue, Colonel Francis Burke (Roger Livesey, in a rollicking performance, and made up to look more of a drunk than Flynn), and off they go on the adventures of wenching and piracy, fighting and guffawing that make up most of the movie. Jamie never forgets, however, that he has a score to settle with Henry, for by now, thanks to jealousy and treachery, Henry has become the Master of Ballantrae and the heir to Clan Durie. If Jamie can&#39;t have the title, then when he sneaks back to Scotland he wants the woman who goes with the title, plus a good deal of money. He&#39;s more than willing to kill Henry to get all this. <br/><br/>Much of the movie was photographed in Scotland and looks great. Jack Cardiff gets the credit. The screenplay is often a bawdy, rag tag braggadocio of ripe dialogue credited to Herb Meadow with additional dialogue by Harold Medford. There is a rousing sea attack, some full-bodiced wenches in Tortuga, a fine, mannered dandy of a French pirate captain and a rouser of a Flynn sword fight. Unfortunately, it&#39;s obvious to one who looks closely that Flynn&#39;s fencing double is getting more screen time that Flynn during the fight. Even so, the story is something of a downer, the tale of a man who could never have enough, who kept close his resentments, who never forgot and who never learned. Well, maybe he learned a little at the end...if he listened to his great, true and only friend, Burke: &quot;Not much time to remember all the girls you&#39;ve known, all the laughter you&#39;ve heard, all the gold you&#39;ve spent, and all the plans you had to spend more. The places we&#39;ve not seen, Jamie! The things that lie about the world! The fun of it!&quot; Perhaps, but the happy end is about as abrupt and startling as suddenly opening a boiled haggis. <br/><br/>Roger Livesey, a fine British actor, would have overshadowed Flynn, in my opinion, if he hadn&#39;t carefully modulated bits and pieces of his performance. Burke is a dangerous rogue, but, unlike Jamie Durie, he&#39;s likable. To see Livesey at his very best, watch him in those three classic movies he starred in for Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger: The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp, I Know Where I&#39;m Going and A Matter of Life and Death. <br/><br/>If we want to remember Errol Flynn in his sad decline, let it be in that unremembered Western shot cheaply in 1950 and not promoted by the studio, Rocky Mountain. Flynn&#39;s prematurely aged face brings authenticity to a Confederate officer who, with his small group of men, decides to act with honor and to accept the consequences. Flynn could act when it suited him.

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