Blood and Sand

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Blood and Sand

Original Movie Poster
Directed by Fred Niblo
Produced by Executive Producer: Jesse L. Lasky
Producer:
Fred Niblo
Written by Novel:
Vicente Blasco Ibáñez
Play:
Tom Cushing
Scenario:
June Mathis
Starring Rudolph Valentino
Lila Lee
Nita Naldi
Rosa Rosanova
Walter Long
Music by Theatre supplied
Cinematography Arthur Edeson
Alvin Wyckoff
Editing by Uncredited:
Dorothy Arzner
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
Release date(s) Flag of United States August 5, 1922
Running time 80 min.
Country Flag of United States United States
Language silent film
English intertitles
IMDb profile
For the 1941 film, see Blood and Sand (1941 film);

Blood and Sand (1922) is a silent movie produced by Paramount Pictures, directed by Fred Niblo and starring Rudolph Valentino, Lila Lee, and Nita Naldi. It was based on the Spanish 1909 novel Blood and Sand (Sangre y arena) by Vicente Blasco Ibáñez. There is an earlier version of Blood and Sand (1916), filmed by Blasco Ibáñez himself, with the help of Max André. This earlier version was restored in 1998 by the Filmoteca de la Generalitat Valenciana (Spain).

Rudolph Valentino as Juan Gallardo
Rudolph Valentino as Juan Gallardo
Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Juan Gallardo (Rudolph Valentino), a village boy born into poverty, grows up to become one of the greatest matadors in Spain. He marries a friend from his childhood, the beautiful and virtuous Carmen (Lila Lee), but after he achieves fame and fortune he finds himself drawn to Doña Sol (Nita Naldi), a wealthy, seductive widow. They embark on a torrid affair with rather sadomasochistic overtones, but Juan, feeling guilty over his betrayal of Carmen, tries to free himself of Doña Sol. Furious at being rejected, she exposes their affair to Carmen and Juan's mother, seemingly destroying his marriage. Growing more and more miserable and dissipated, Juan becomes reckless in the arena and is eventually killed in a bullfight but does manage to reconcile with Carmen moments before he dies.

There is also a subplot involving a local outlaw whose career is paralleled to Juan's throughout the film by the village philosopher: Juan's fatal injury in the bullring comes moments after the outlaw is shot by the police.

Blood and Sand proved very successful at the box office. It was parodied in 1922 by Stan Laurel in Mud and Sand and in 1924 by Will Rogers in the Hal Roach short film Big Moments From Little Pictures.

Blood and Sand has been remade twice:

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