Hearts and Armour
(1982)
Director: Giacomo
Battiato
Cast:
Tanya Roberts, Barbara De Rossi, Zeudi Araya
I've always loved Italian movies. The musclemen movies
of the 50s, the
spaghetti westerns of the 60s, the giallo of the 70s, and the
Conan/Max
Max rip-offs of the 80s. So it may be of surprise that I originally
passed
on the Italian Hearts and Armour. Why? Although I came
close
to renting it several times, the dull-looking box art is what
ultimately
made me decide against it. Recently, someone I know with similar tastes
in motion pictures saw it and simply said, "Trust me; it's worth
watching!"
That gave me the extra effort into renting it, and I wasn't
disappointed.
Hearts
and Armour is a knee-slapping exercise in unintentional
hilarity.
Wait - I'll give it some credit and label it the best-looking
laugh
riot I've seen in quite a while. While it's not up to the hilarity and
energy of the Ator flicks (Ator the Flying Eagle,
The
Blade Master, and The Iron Warrior), it still a
must
for anyone with a taste for so-bad-it's-good sword and sorcery.
The opening credit crawl informs us of the time and
situation of the
movie - at least I think so, because it's all in Italian. Anyway, we
soon
get the general situation. It's during the middle ages, with the
Christians
and Moors having another of their endless fights. Bradamante (de Rossi)
meets a witch and is shown a vision of a knight getting killed in a
one-on-one
fight with another knight. The witch tells her that the man ("A
prince!"
spits the witch - literally, for we clearly see several globs of spit
flying
out of her mouth) will be her love, and she is powerless to stop his
fate.
She starts on her journey (where?), while the soundtrack
thunders the
endless electronic score. Along the way, she is attacked by some
would-be
rapists, but an empty suit of armor (with a frying pan on the helmet)
rides by on the horse and chops off a selected piece of each one, with
the blood, hand, scalp, hand, and foot flying. The armor tells her to
put on the suit, and she'll be invincible. And she'll have an easier
time
making breakfast.
We then meet the Christian knights, who have even
sillier armor. The
chief knight, Orlando (Rick Edwards), has flames on his helmet. And two
of his buddies have what appears to be a flower vase and a long sword
handle
on the top of their helmets. If the sword handle helmet was modeled
after
the screenwriter's head, it would explain a lot. And we meet
the
Moors, who have helmets somewhat less silly, though the crescents on
their
helmets looks like they have boomerangs embedded deep in their heads.
Bradamante, in the meantime, has rescued the Moor
princess (Tanya Roberts)
from those darn rapists, and bumps into the Christian knights. The
Christian
knights subsequently captured (never properly illustrated) the Moor
prince,
Ruggero - who is the knight seen in Bradamante's vision. Bradamante
quickly
fall into one of those cheesy "love at first sight" romances. To be
politically
correct, Orlando and the Moor princess have their own cheesy "love at
first
sight" romance. The others do not approve of these romances - obviously
they symbolize the bigoted, conservative population of the modern 20th
century society and illustrations into the evils of racism and
anti-multiculturalism.
Subsequently, there are fights, people get separated, and the lovers
much
find each other again while keeping their duties as warriors.
A Moor warrior named Ferrau (Tony Vogel) finds the
princess. Vogel steals
the show with his extremely hammy, bug-eyed performance, complete with
howling. Though he rescues the princess, he tries to rape her but can't
remove his rusted metal codpiece. Getting away, she finds the ruins of
a church and a friendly priest. The priest isn't friendly for long,
when
he also attempts to rape her, though a swift kick to his balls and
putting
a magic emerald in her mouth that makes her invisible helps her get
away.
Bradamante has better luck, eventually catching up to
Ruggero and having
PG-quality sex in a garden cave, despite the midget magician Atlante
(who
met Ruggero earlier) dancing around, making noises and warning the two
of them that their relationship is doomed when Ruggero and Orlando
finally
fight.
Meanwhile, the Moor king has brought in three
mercenaries (one a samurai),
who knock off one of the knights and create havoc. Both the Christians
and Moors are tired of fighting and being humiliated onscreen, so they
decide to each send a few of their best warriors to fight, and the
conflict
will be resolved there. Is Ruggero doomed to die at the hands of
Orlando?
Will Orlando finally get some nookie from the princess? These questions
are resolved in the final 20 minutes, the funniest part of the movie,
complete
with a "surprise" revelation that will be guessed by most of the
audience
before the characters find out.
Hearts and Armours is so silly, it would
take a long list
to write down all the laughs. They include some really lame
decapitations,
a sword that looks like a comb, an out of control horse supposedly
tripping
on the ground (but you can see the tripwire), the Moors wearing
uniforms
that strongly resemble jogging suits, and those wacky helmets. To top
it
off, the movie takes itself so seriously, it has the opposite effect,
provoking
laughs instead of generating awe, scope, or action.
Earlier, I mentioned that this was the best-looking
laugh riot I'd seen
in quite a while. No joke - the locations are well chosen and
professionally
shot, generating the little atmosphere in the movie. And the Dolby
Stereo
sound was above average, even on my TV's tiny speakers. Too bad that
the
heavy-handed electronic score spoils things somewhat.
Curious, I did some quick research after watching the
movie. It turns
out that the movie is based on Orlando Furioso, written by
Ludovico
Ariosto in 1516. Now, I've never read it, but I'm sure in its own way
it
was better than this adaptation. And there is evidence that this movie
might have been better in its original form; it was originally an
Italian
mini-series, and cut for North America. That would explain a lot of the
choppiness and unclear plot details scattered throughout. Though I'm
sure
that the missing footage also contains a lot more unintended laughs. In
short, Hearts and Armour is a good bet for anyone in the
mood for Italian cheese.
UPDATE: "Ed" sent this to me:
"Hello Greywizard!
"With a group of friends, I saw Hearts
And Armour
at The Director's Guild in Los Angeles in 1982. It was a test
screening of some sort; no credits and the back row of the theatre was
full of executive types.
"Within minutes of the start of this movie, the audience knew what they
were in for. Some of my friends began loudly cracking jokes and
soon the entire audience was laughing and joining in with comments and
quips!
"Before the movie was halfway through, I took a look at the back row to
find it quite empty.
"Thanks for reminding me of one of the best "so bad it's good" films
I've seen!"
Check for availability on Amazon (VHS)
See also: Quest For The Mighty
Sword, Troll 2, The
High Crusade
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