The Guardian (USA)

The Three Musketeers: Milady review – more plotting, fighting and galloping derring-do

- Peter Bradshaw

At a teeth-rattling gallop, this second Three Musketeers film follows immediatel­y on from the first – being the two halves of the Alexandre Dumas original from screenwrit­ers Matthieu Delaporte and Alexandre de la Patellière, directed by Martin Bourboulon. This second film effectivel­y stars Eva Green as Milady de Winter, the slinky, sexy, smirking and sulphurous hitwoman working for Cardinal Richelieu. In the first film, Milady made a pretty fatal-looking clifftop jump, like Moriarty going over the Reichenbac­h Falls, but now she is back, and more ambiguous and seductive than ever.

Milady is involved in a fantastica­lly complex plot to bring France into a war with perfidious Albion, in so doing exploiting a treacherou­s insurgency by the Huguenots; it’s all in the cause of toppling King Louis XIII (Louis Garrel). The chief plotter isn’t whom everyone considers the obvious candidate, although the audience can make a pretty shrewd guess at the ultimate culprit.

Our four heroes are front and centre once again: D’Artagnan (François Civil),

Athos (Vincent Cassel), Porthos (Pio Marmaï) and Aramis (Romain Duris), giving us some derring-do which involves infiltrati­ng the schemers to discover what is going on. D’Artagnan is, as ever, on a romantic quest to rescue his amour, Constance Bonacieux (Lyna Khoudri) from abduction and imprisonme­nts; there is also to be a sensationa­l revelation concerning Athos, although on this point Cassel’s performanc­e is a bit opaque, considerin­g the emotional tumult that must surely be raging in his heart.

The fight scenes are as gonzo as the first, although there isn’t quite as much emphasis on horsemansh­ip, and there are some excellent stunts, though I felt that the break between the films means that some of the momentum is lost, and re-establishi­ng the investment in character and action is more of an ask. But it’s still a tremendous spectacle: all four of the musketeers are very attractive characters, particular­ly the noble and agonised Civil as D’Artagnan.

• The Three Musketeers: Milady is released on 15 December in UK and Irish cinemas.

 ?? Deadly enemy … Eva Green in The Three Muskeeteer­s: Milady. Photograph: Ben King ??
Deadly enemy … Eva Green in The Three Muskeeteer­s: Milady. Photograph: Ben King

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