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Bride of Vengeance

Bride of Vengeance is a 1949 American historical drama film directed by Mitchell Leisen and starring Paulette Goddard, John Lund and Macdonald Carey. Produced and distributed by Paramount Pictures, it is set in the Italian Renaissance era. Ray Milland was originally cast in the film but refused the assignment, leading the studio to suspend him for ten weeks.[1]

Bride of Vengeance

Paramount Pictures

  • April 7, 1949 (1949-04-07)

92 minutes

United States

English

Plot[edit]

Lucrezia Borgia's brother Cesare Borgia has her second husband Prince Bisceglie killed in order to marry her to Alfonso I d'Este, Duke of Ferrara, whose well-defended lands lay between the Borgia's Papal States and Venice, which Cesare wants to conquer. Cesare ensures Lucretia blames Alfonso for the murder and, encouraged by Cesare, she plots deadly revenge against her new husband. When the poison she gives him is counter-acted, and she realizes Cesare really killed her second husband, she returns to help Alfonso defend Ferrara against Cesare's army.


Cesare retreats, killing Michellotto, who wanted to continue the fight. In the final scene, the couple drink to their love.

as Lucrezia Borgia

Paulette Goddard

as Cesare Borgia

Macdonald Carey

as Vanetti

Albert Dekker

as Prince Bisceglie

John Sutton

as Michelotto

Raymond Burr

as Tiziano

Donald Randolph

as Bastino

Charles Dayton

as Captain of the Guard

Anthony Caruso

as Negligent Sentry

Dick Foote

as Conti Peruzzi

William Farnum

as Gemma

Kate Drain Lawson

as Chamberlain

Nicholas Joy

as Filippo

Fritz Leiber

as Lady Eleanora

Rose Hobart

as False Physician

Douglas Spencer

as Mayor

Nestor Paiva

as Bolfi

Frank Puglia

as Councillor

Houseley Stevenson

as Councillor

Robert Greig

as Councillor

Don Beddoe

as Beppo

Billy Gilbert

Reception[edit]

In a review for Los Angeles Times, Philip K. Scheuer wrote that "These people [...] are not kidding the parts and they are not fooling themselves; they are too smart for that. They know they have a dud and they are stuck with it--but as a last resort they are trying to put it over to the audience for whatever that audience may read into it--satire, history, melodrama or just a chance to get off its feet for an hour and half. On that last account 'Bride of Vengeance' probably qualifies. It is better than looking at a blank wall".[2]


Bosley Crowther of New York Times wrote that "Miss Goddard plays Lucretia as a grand-dame right out of a wardrobe room, with the suavity and voluptuousness of a model in a display of lingerie" and "[a]s Alfonso, addressed as 'Magnificence,' John Lund gives a fair picture of a nice American prankster got up for a fancy-dress ball," concluding the review with "Bride of Vengeance is an obvious masquerade".[3]


John M. Coppinger's review in The Washington Post stated that it was "simple, sheer, unadorned escapist stuff. As a work of art, it makes no pretensions. It's a lavish spectacle of hokum... No attempt has been made at accuracy in the presentation of this historical romance". Coppinger wrote that director Leisen "has gotten much comedy in a film which could easily have turned out to be a flop".[4]


Costuming (by Mary Grant) was given as the film's chief strength by Mae Tinee in a review for Chicago Daily Tribune.[5]

McKay, James. Ray Milland: The Films, 1929-1984. McFarland, 2020.

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Bride of Vengeance

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Bride of Vengeance