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the-three-musketeers
via Pathé

The 29th feature-length adaptation of a literary classic surprisingly finds something new to say on streaming

Been there, done that... but is this a brand new t-shirt?

Disney Plus original Peter Pan & Wendy recently came under fire for marking the third big budget retelling of the iconic story in the space of just 20 years, but spare a thought for director Martin Bourboulon’s ambitious The Three Musketeers, which ranks as the 29th feature-length adaptation Alexandre Dumas’ novel.

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That’s not even counting the additional methods in which the legendary tale has been told across television, radio, comic books, or video games, either, so the filmmaker faced one hell of a task in trying to put a fresh spin on some of the most well-worn narrative material the industry has ever encountered.

the-three-musketeers
via Pathé

Even more ambitiously, though, it’s only the first half of a two-part extravaganza, with The Three Musketeers: D’Artagnan being followed by concluding chapter Milady in December, a result of an epic undertaking that shot back-to-back across 150 days of production. Not only that, but there are also two small screen spin-offs in the works, so we’re getting a full-blown cinematic universe out of the equation.

Nobody was asking for yet another film based on The Three Musketeers, but given that D’Artagnan holds a Rotten Tomatoes score of 96 percent and is currently flying high as one of the most-watched titles on iTunes this week per FlixPatrol, it’s becoming increasingly evident that there’s still an audience out there for one of the most heavily-adapted works of fiction there’s ever been.

That’s both a testament to Dumas’ enduring classic, and the ongoing dearth of ideas that means anything with name recognition is always in danger of being repurposed ad nauseum.


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Scott Campbell
News, reviews, interviews. To paraphrase Keanu Reeves; Words. Lots of words.