Film Synopsis
France, 1562. Catherine de Medici rules as regent for her son,
the 12 year-old Charles IX. Though nominally Catholic, Catherine
seeks to maintain peace between the rival Catholic and Protestant
factions. To that end, she outlaws duelling and invites the
Protestant 'Queen', the Comtesse de Baynes, to sit beside her at the
forthcoming Tournament and her son, François, to attend at
court. Isabelle Ginori, lady-in-waiting to the Queen, loves
Henri de Rogier, a Catholic nobleman. The pair, accompanied by
the Comte Ginori, Isabelle's brother, go to church to announce their
engagement. They are observed by François who, in the
Comte's hearing, boasts that Isabelle shall come to him that night.
Outraged, the Comte challenges François to a duel. To
avoid the guard, they fight on the city wall. Lucrèce
Pazzi, François's mistress, learns of the duel and arrives at
the scene just as the Comte falls dead from the battlements.
François presents himself at court and is urged by the Queen to
aid her in her efforts at reconciliation between the two religious
factions. As a reward for his assistance, François
requests Isabelle's hand in marriage. The Queen agrees and an
engagement feast is arranged for that evening. Henri is
restrained from intervening at court but bursts in on the feast.
He and François fight. Henri is wounded but the
intervention of the Queen's equerry ends the encounter
prematurely. The pair are taken before the Queen.
François proposes that they should settle the matter at the
Tournament, the winner taking Isabelle's hand. Henri and
François joust before the crowds at the Tournament.
François has the upper hand when the guard arrives to announce
the discovery of the Comte's body and, on the strength of the jealous
Lucrèce's information, names François as his
killer. Refusing to be taken alive, François is
overpowered by the guard and dies in his mother's arms. Henri and
Isabelle embrace.
© James Travers
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