Fortunes of Captain Blood
Sabatini's famous buccaneer in swashbuckling adventure...exotic romance!
When he unwittingly sends some of his men into a trap, pirate Captain Peter Blood decides to rescue them. They've been taken prisoner by the Spanish Marquis de Riconete who is now using them as slave labor harvesting pearls from the sea.
Cast

Louis Hayward
Captain Peter Blood

Patricia Medina
Isabelita Sotomayor

George Macready
Marquis de Riconete

Alfonso Bedoya
Carmilio, Prison Overseer

Dona Drake
Pepita

Lowell Gilmore
George Fairfax

Wilton Graff
Capt. Alvarado

Curt Bois
King Charles II

Lumsden Hare
Tom Mannering

Billy Bevan
Billy Bragg

Harry Cording
Will Ward

Duke York
Andrew Hardy

Sven Hugo Borg
Swede

Martín Garralaga
Antonio Viamonte

Terry Kilburn
Kenny Jensen

Alberto Morin
Miguel Gonzales

Victor Adamson
Crew Member

Trevor Bardette
Head Prison Guard

David Bond
Lieutenant

Charles Stevens
Juan Otlas
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Reviews
CinemaSerf
I think it's fair to say that Louis Hayward was just a little bit past his best when he made this rather dry pirate adventure. He picks up the character from Errol Flynn (which maybe doesn't help either) as "Capt. Blood" and works on a complicated plan to go into the town incognito, and rescue some of his crew captured by the wicked "Marquis" (George Macready) now used to fish for pearls - quite a dangerous activity in the shark-infested waters. Along the way, he falls for the slightly aloof "Isabelita" (Patricia Medina) who is the daughter of his antagonist and the apple of the eye of the ambitious "Fairfax" (Lowell Gilmore). What's really missing here - save for, maybe the last ten minutes, is action. For an action film it's positively stolid. Hayward tries hard to hold it together and Macready was ever a good baddie but nobody is firing at all well here as they have to plod through the interminable dialogue with just nowhere near enough swash, buckle or swinging from the yardarm. This is one of my favourite genres and though it's not the best, it's still watchable enough. You'll never remember it, though.
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