The Mark of Zorro (1940)

1940, 20th Century Fox. Directed by Rouben Mamoulian. Tyrone Power, Linda Darnell, Basil Rathbone, Gale Sondergaard, Eugene Pallette.

Decent Films Ratings

Overall
Recommendability
?A-
Artistic/
Entertainment Value
?
Moral/Spiritual
Value (+4/-4)
? +2
Age
Appropriateness
?Kids & Up*

External Ratings

MPAA ?PG USCCB ?A-II

Content advisory: Swashbuckling violence, including one duel to the death; very mild innuendo; romantic complications.

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The Mark of Zorro (1940) (DVD)

A National Catholic Register "Video/DVD Picks" capsule review.

By Steven D. Greydanus

Tyrone Powers is Zorro in this enjoyable remake of the 1920 silent classic starring Douglas Fairbanks, Sr. Powers can’t match the original Zorro’s astonishing acrobatics and doesn’t try — but the rousing climactic duel against Basil Rathbone’s villainous Captain Esteban, one of the best swordfights ever filmed at that time, almost makes up for it. Powers also brings more romantic feeling to his scenes with the heroine (Linda Darnell) who prefers Zorro to Don Diego.

The 1940 film further benefits from a more coherent story in which we see Zorro’s origin, as Diego returns from Spain to a California beset by injustice. The well-written script shows an angrily bewildered Diego shrewdly analyzing this new situation, instinctively adopting a dandyish persona to hide behind even before deciding what to do.

Zorro’s Catholic milieu is again positively portrayed, though with less depth than in the original. Eugene Pallette — Friar Tuck in the 1938 Errol Flynn Robin Hood — plays a similarly pugnacious, stalwart clergyman, and Diego casually displays a brief flash of Marian sentiment ("Thank you, Mother," he says as he retrieves stolen tax money hidden behind a statue). The social-justice themes, too, play out with feeling, culminating in a popular uprising against the tyrannical alcalde.

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Review: The Mark of Zorro (1920)

A | **** | +2| Kids & Up*

You haven’t seen Zorro until you’ve seen Douglas Fairbanks Sr. as Zorro in the 1920 silent swashbuckling classic.

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Review: Don Q Son of Zorro (1925)

A | **** | +0| Kids & Up*

Don Q Son of Zorro, named one of the year’s ten best films by The New York Times, actually outdoes its predecessor, with a stronger and more sophisticated plot, better pacing, more interesting and complex characterizations, grander production values and set design, and more consistent action.

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Review: The Mask of Zorro (1998)

A- | ***½ | +2| Teens & Up

Thrilling, heartbreaking, witty, romantic, and largely family-friendly, The Mask of Zorro is possibly the best swashbuckler of its decade, a film at once true to the spirit of the classic period actioners and also thoroughly of its own time.

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Review: The Legend of Zorro (2005)

D+ | | +1-1| Teens & Up

More precisely, it’s a “funny family action film” in the Fantastic Four mold — that is, a movie whose key qualification as kid entertainment is that it isn’t good enough for grown‑ups. Too bad. Our kids deserve better. For that matter, so do we.

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