The Count of Monte-Cristo | Telescope Film
The Count of Monte-Cristo

The Count of Monte-Cristo (Le Comte de Monte-Cristo)

Critic Rating

(read reviews)

User Rating

The target of a nefarious plot, Edmond Dantès is arrested on his wedding day for a crime he did not commit. After over a decade in an island prison, he stages a daring escape to seek revenge on the men who betrayed him under the guise of the Count of Monte-Cristo. Based on the classic novel by Alexandre Dumas.

Stream The Count of Monte-Cristo

What are users saying?

Antoine Corbani

In recent years, it has become a general consensus in France, from critics and the public alike, that our national cinema is progressively losing its prestige, due to the lack of incoming original ideas, star power, and writing talent. Raunchy comedic tropes and storylines are endlessly recycled (an example of which is the nightmarish “Les Tuches” franchise that is still ongoing) and the French drama was thought to have lost its voice. However, many films since the start of the decade (and their success both in France and abroad) seem to mark a revival of great French cinema: “Portrait of a Lady on Fire”, “Titane”, “Anatomy of a Fall”, and now, Alexandre de La Patellière and Matthieu Delaporte’s “The Count of Monte Cristo”. Based on Alexandre Dumas’ classic novel, it tells the story of the young Edmond Dantès, who, on the day of his wedding, is framed by monarchist bureaucrats who claim that he is an ally of the Bonapartist movement and must therefore be imprisoned. Indefinitely jailed in Marseille’s iconic Chateau d’If, Dantès plots his ambitious escape and dreams of exacting revenge on his accusers. An explosive performance from Pierre Niney as Dantès is certainly the highlight of the film, combined with the gorgeous cinematography and its depiction of Southern France, a powerful score, and ravishing costume design. A delightful feast for the eyes and ears that somehow got a considerable number of French critics to agree on its brilliance.

What are critics saying?

100

Portland Oregonian by Kim Morgan

Utterly thrilling and enthralling, a commercial film that paces itself wonderfully, never allowing the action or romance to outweigh its story and characters. For mainstream adventure fare, that's quite an accomplishment.

90

The New York Times by Jeannette Catsoulis

Refusing to pander to restless derrières, they’ve given this big, bounding, beautifully cinematic swashbuckler almost three hours to breathe. Yet their pacing is so frisky — and Celia Lafitedupont’s editing so elegant — your derrière is unlikely to complain.

90

Screen Rant by Mary Kassel

The Count of Monte Cristo is as much a swashbuckling adventure as it is a warning about the dangers of letting yourself get lost in the desire for things that don't matter. With a gorgeous score that uplifts every scene, making them more tense, romantic, and devastating, and sets and costumes on par with the best period pieces of the 21st century, everything about the movie is planned and carefully executed.

90

Washington Post by Stephen Hunter

That tale gets a first-class Hallmark Hall of Fame treatment in Kevin Reynolds's swaggering The Count of Monte Cristo, which is old-form moviemaking at its best.

88

RogerEbert.com

The Count of Monte Cristo is an energetic, entertaining treat, full of noble heroes, fair maidens, evil villains, duels at dawn, and swashbuckling sword fights.

80

New York Magazine (Vulture) by Bilge Ebiri

For much of their 178-minute running time, Delaporte and de La Patellière let us delight in the spectacle of Dantès and his associates weaving their sinister, at times mysterious web — well-positioning us for the eventual reckoning, when we’ll be thoroughly invested in all these characters and their impending fates.

80

The Observer (UK) by Wendy Ide

It’s directed with verve and acted with gusto.

80

Chicago Reader by Lisa Alspector

It's a heady mix of the earnest, the grave, and the frivolous. Wizardly director Kevin Reynolds even manages to condense into a single shot, with a wisp of humor, several of the hero’s long years in a dungeon without making them any less grueling.

80

L.A. Weekly by Chuck Wilson

Reynolds, working in close harmony with cinematographer Andrew Dunn (Gosford Park), brings an infectious brio and an occasional sweeping grace to the classic trappings of Dumas.

80

Variety by Joe Leydon

A lavishly mounted and appealingly old-fashioned swashbuckler with nary a trace of wink-wink irony or revisionist embellishment.

75

Baltimore Sun by Michael Sragow

Performances by Jim Caviezel and Richard Harris make this a great adventure.

75

Chicago Sun-Times by Roger Ebert

This is the kind of adventure picture the studios churned out in the Golden Age -- so traditional it almost feels new.

75

Charlotte Observer by Lawrence Toppman

It pays homage to the genre's most glorious days.

75

Miami Herald by Charles Savage

An exhilarating visualization of Alexandre Dumas' classic novel of betrayal and vengeance.

75

Philadelphia Inquirer by Carrie Rickey

This delicious adventure of crude betrayal and elegant revenge is yummy even when reheated by director Kevin Reynolds.

70

Los Angeles Times by Robert Abele

Delaporte and De La Patellière understand that Dumas’ type of novelistic revenge, whether froid or chaud, is best served onscreen in the most picturesque European locations, with cinematographer Nicolas Bolduc’s cameras ready to swoop and soar as needed, and paced to gallop, never dawdle.

70

Screen Daily by Wendy Ide

This is a devilishly handsome old-school tale of treachery and intrigue that zips through its nearly three hours in a blur of swordplay, glorious costumes and prosthetic rubber facial disguises.

67

The Film Stage by C.J. Prince

For a good stretch of time, though, The Count of Monte Cristo is a prime example of popcorn fun, even if its filmmakers might have not intended for it to be laughed at as much as I did. But whether it’s for the right or wrong reasons, a good time is still a good time.

60

The Hollywood Reporter by Jordan Mintzer

The Count of Monte Cristo is the kind of movie where, after 180 minutes and many, many more plot points, you walk out of the theater without having felt the time pass. That’s a good thing if you’re looking for a fairly entertaining, swords-and-puffy-shirts revenge tale — and Dumas’ novel is probably the mother of all revenge tales.

60

The Guardian by Phil Hoad

The pay-off is a fast-moving, good-looking gallop of Mission: Impossible-style mask play, languorous conniving in courtyards and occasional outbreaks of derring-do that chews up three hours without pausing for quail sandwiches.