26 thoughts on “TBT: The Scarlet Pimpernel (1982)

  1. One of my favorite movies! A total delight.

    I love the 1934 version too, but Anthony Andrews just embodied this role in his own way with such aplomb. Hearing him insult Chauvelin’s cravat always makes me laugh with glee.

    I always wondered if they chose that specific hairstyle for Marguerite because it was the most 1980s-perm-like of styles close to the period.

  2. I’ve never seen this version, but now I need to!

    I admit I rather enjoyed the 1999 miniseries version with Richard E. Grant and Martin Shaw (though I think Elizabeth McGovern was miscast).

  3. Ever since my high school history teacher showed us this movie in class, I’ve been a huge fan. It’s one of my favorite films and one I may not have watched on my own. I do enjoy the original as well and agree with you. Why not both?!

  4. This is my all-time favourite version of The Scarlet Pimpernel. I know the makeup is Very 1980s, but I really love the costumes despite their overall 1780s look. The hair is as awesome as the costumes. It is well cast, especially Ian as Chauvellin.
    I don’t know what you did, but I’m able to view this on my phone. Not a bad gateway in sight.
    I also noted that Emilia Fox has been cast as Marguerite’s acting rival and betrayer.

  5. 1982 – I might have only been 4 years old, but I had already absorbed quite a lot of Masterpiece Theatre thanks to my dear Mum having the telly on next door to my room – and if it wasn’t that it was some BBC/PBS broadcast that I nearly always fell asleep to very quiet British voices and classical music.

    Digression aside, The Scarlet Pimpernel is the first I wholeheartedly remember from beginning to end – thanks to my parents having a VHS and we could have re-watches.

    I was so thoroughly hooked with this that I never even bothered with looking or being amazed at contemporary or 20th fashion again. It is where I jumped in headlong at the start of a long life of designing costumes, writing and acting in plays, classical music composition, and finally where I have been for over a decade – writing detailed historical romance fiction.

    So this movie has in fact – “it” all for me – Bonus points that it is based on a book written by a woman – Baroness Emmuska Orczy – and that it is the only period piece I can get my long time partner of 16 years to laugh with me and enjoy it (aside from BlackAdder) He would rather watch Superbad or the Star Trek movies for an example.

    Happy International Woman’s Day Frock Flicks!

    Thank you for your enlightening and passion filled posts of information and humor!

    )

  6. Ah, such a British thing, that Pimpernel. Nobody heard of that in France. Sad, since it is “historical” French bashing in one of it’s earliest expression. Always fun. But what can I say? We were busy: War, and killing all those aristocrats before turning on each other… And then Napoleon and moar wars. No one gets real excited about who or who didn’t make it with their heads attached amongst an aristocracy, which, let’s be honest, was 90% a waste of space.(As an aristo myself, I’m allowed to say this… Though, knowing my family great sense of timing, they must have brought on in the class in 1788. Maybe early 1789.)

  7. I love Percy’s smug, simpering laugh when he’s at parties. I went as him for Halloween once in college. No one got it (or even knew who I was talking about) but you better believe I imitated him relentlessly the entire time.

  8. I generally dislike remakes when the original is so good, but both the Leslie Howard version and this are so good that I love them both. Bonus for color in the 1982 version.

  9. The makeup looks like Way Bandy, the famous 70s-80s makeup artist. And Regent: was that George III at that time being regent to whoever preceeded him, since otherwise it confuses me if you mean the eventual Prince Regent, George IV…?

    1. The Prince Regent is the eventual George IV, who at this time was acting as regent to his father, mad King George III.

  10. I’ve adored this version since I was a child and now my children in turn delight in it. You should have heard my youngest son explain that the Scarlet Pimpernel was simply Ivanhoe in disguise. (Silly Chauvelin!)

    And you forgot to mention Armand….

  11. I adore this movie.

    Funny story: Mom and I discovered it when I was a youngish teenager one afternoon and our company arrived 10 minutes before the end, so we had to shut off the library VHS tape right at the most suspenseful part and wait like four hours to finish it. We popped it in our VHS player and hit play as soon as our company pulled out of the driveway! Hah, imagine if they’d had to come back for some reason.

    It’s quality. Even a super picky male friend of mine who refuses to watch anything not made in the last decade (because OMG TOO CHEESY) sat all the way through it, nodded, and said, “THAT WAS EXCELLENT.”

    So, props to this film; most everyone I’ve shown it to, loved it. Oh, and it created a whole host of little Anthony Andrews fangirls among my friends. ;)

  12. Whatever happened to Anthony Andrews? For a while in the 80s he was THE historical costume movie guy.

    1. He plays the retiring Prime Minister in The King’s Speech. I almost did a spit-take when I saw him, it was so unexpected.

  13. Ha! I literally just watched this yesterday for the first time. It was my reward to myself for finally finishing and ordering my CSA symposium poster board, lol.

    And, oh man, had I ever been missing out this whole time! It was so fabulous! 1982 Anthony Andrews is a new fave, I just wanna go around saying “sink meh” to everyone! And super-80s make-up aside I was really impressed with the costuming, especially for this production era.

  14. I’d love to see this, despite the anachronistic make-up. But was Ian ever that young?! (Actually, I know he must have been, because I saw him as D.H. Lawrence in “A Priest of Love” (1981), and very good he was, too.)

  15. My classes loved it, and the girls fell in love with Anthony Andrews.

  16. Agreed – this is the only version of Scarlet Pimpernel that I truly love (have seen the one with Leslie Howard, as well as Richard Grant). Phyllis Dalton designed the costumes (love her work), and while the make up is indeed very 80s, it’s still a treat. If my husband is home when I have the DVD in, he has to come in and watch that climactic duel. I swear, I can’t get enough of Percy’s honest endearments to Marguerite…

  17. He was so good in The Pallisers, which is where I first saw AA,or maybe it was Brideshead Revisited…hmmm

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