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The Invincible Mr. Disraeli Poster

The Invincible Mr. Disraeli

1963 | 76m | English

(41 votes)

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Popularity: 0.9 (history)

Director: George Schaefer
Writer:
Staring:
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The rise of the legendary 19th-century British politician and prime minister Benjamin Disraeli.
Release Date: Apr 03, 1963
Director: George Schaefer
Writer:
Genres: TV Movie
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Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Aug 03, 2024
Entered: Apr 30, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
Trevor Howard Benjamin Disraeli
Greer Garson Mary Anne Disraeli
Eric Berry Sir Robert Peel
Norman Barrs Speaker of the House
Denholm Elliott Montague Corry
Frederick Worlock Lord Derby
Peter von Zerneck Prince Bismarck
Hugh Franklin Dr. Jenner
Chris Gampel General Peel (as C.M. Gampel)
Chris Gampel Colonel Peel (as C.M. Gampel)
Hurd Hatfield Lionel Rothschild
Geoffrey Keen William Gladstone
Kate Reid Queen Victoria
Robinson Stone Rothchild's Butler
Robinson Stone Rothschild's Butler
Frederic Tozere Mr. Malloy
Name Job
George Schaefer Director
Name Title
Organization Category Person
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Reviews

Geronimo1967
7.0

Trevor Howard does rather well here to condense thirty-odd years of the political life of Benjamin Disraeli into seventy-five minutes. A principled idealist of the Jewish faith, he was determined to attain the office of Prime Minister to the initially quite hostile Queen Victoria (Kate Reid) and to ... take his nation to the pinnacle of the world order. His only other love being his wife Mary-Anne (a generous contribution from Greer Garson), a devoted, loving but rather poorly woman. This drama illustrates in the briefest of fashions just how this man managed too attain the highest office, and of the price he had to pay along the way. The production is well supported by the costume and set departments, and the story engages well, albeit superficially, with the politics of the time. The writing did annoy me after a while, though. I could have been doing with much less England/English and more Britain/British - a very lazy trait amongst English writers who are apt to forget that the UK is more than just their bit. Otherwise, it serves a useful purpose in providing an introduction that, though not as charmingly told as the George Arliss version from 1929, is informative and encouraging of more reading about this curious and quite visionary man who played the game adeptly and cleverly.

Nov 11, 2022