Francis of Assisi

The story of a lusty, fighting young adventurer who exchanged his sword for a cross

7.6
19611h 45m

In 13th century Italy, Francis Bernardone, the son of an Assisi merchant, renounces a promising army career in favor of a monastic life and starts his own religious order, sanctioned by the Pope.

Production

Logo for 20th Century Fox

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: FRANCIS OF ASSISI (1961) Theatrical Trailer - Bradford Dillman, Dolores Hart, Stuart Whitman

FRANCIS OF ASSISI (1961) Theatrical Trailer - Bradford Dillman, Dolores Hart, Stuart Whitman

Cast

Photo of Bradford Dillman

Bradford Dillman

Francis Bernardone of Assisi

Photo of Stuart Whitman

Stuart Whitman

Count Paolo of Vandria

Photo of Cecil Kellaway

Cecil Kellaway

Cardinal Hugolino

Photo of Eduard Franz

Eduard Franz

Pietro Bernardone

Photo of Athene Seyler

Athene Seyler

Aunt Buona

Photo of Mervyn Johns

Mervyn Johns

Brother Juniper

Photo of Russell Napier

Russell Napier

Brother Elias

Photo of John Welsh

John Welsh

Canon Cattanei

Photo of Edith Sharpe

Edith Sharpe

Donna Pica

Photo of Oliver Johnston

Oliver Johnston

Father Livoni

Photo of Malcolm Keen

Malcolm Keen

Bishop Guido

More Like This

Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

This might have been better had Michael Curtiz cast it better, as it is Bradford Dillman delivers us quite an undercooked offering as the eponymous character from 13th Century Italy. The film is colourful and the story gets an authentic Hollywood makeover, but somehow the sentiment of this man who sacrificed much of the trappings of his fairly well-to-do family life is lost amongst the showier elements of the production. The plot centres around the lively and rakish "Francis" who returns from his wartime experiences, ostensibly inspired by God to set up his own religious order. Together with the help of "Clare" (real-life nun Dolores Hart) and with the support of the Pope, they work hard to abide by their chosen vows of poverty and chastity. It is quite an easy watch, but somehow neither lead performance really resonate. This is a story that ought to be inspirational, it ought to evoke emotions and yet, somehow, it is just a rather sterile chronology that offers us a glimpse of their lives and troubles, safe in the knowledge that the actor's air-conditioned Winnebago was just out of shot. The dialogue offers us little by way of interest, either - indeed, dare I say this of anything from this master of the swash and buckle - but this is actually quite dull!

You've reached the end.