The Princess and the Pirate 1944
The Princess and the Pirate
Princess Margaret is travelling incognito to elope with her true love instead of marrying the man her father has betrothed her to. On the high seas, her ship is attacked by pirates who know her identity and plan to kidnap her and hold her for a king's ransom.
Princess Margaret is travelling incognito to elope with her true love instead of marrying the man her father has betrothed her to. On the high seas, her ship is attacked by pirates who know her identity and plan to kidnap her and hold her for a king's ransom.
Videos & Photos
All 1 Videos & 4 Photoscast
Full Cast & Crew... Sylvester the Great
... Princess Margaret
... Featherhead
... La Roche
... Captain Barrett / The Hook
... Pedro
User reviews
See All 1 Reviews30 Jun 2022 by CinemaSerf
I'll admit that it has always puzzled me that war-weary American troops could ever have been entertained by Bob Hope. His so-called "zany" humour always struck me as being contrived and obvious. This film, however, does go some way to contradict that rather simplistic impression of the star. He plays a cowardly actor who finds himself along with "Princess Margaret" (no, not the real one) captured by pirates en route to their island to retrieve some buried treasure. When they discover her identity, they try to ransom her and it's all down to "Sylvester" (Hope) to save the day. It's got a great supporting cast - Walter Brennan as the aptly named "Featherhead"; Walter Slezak as pirate "La Roche" and an on-form Victor McLaglen as "The Hook". Virginia Mayo as the "Princess" never could act her way out of a paper bag, and here is no different - she has the glamour and the looks, but the charisma of a wet haddock. There are plenty of quippy one-liners; Mr. Hope's asides to the audience are actually quite funny now and again and coupled with some good, hammy, set piece buckle and swash it's actually quite a watchable little pantomime-style effort. Not great, but much better than I was expecting.
Producers:
Release Date:
Nov 17, 1944 (United States)
Run Time:
1hr 34`
MMPA Rating:
NR
Original Language:
English
Production Countries:
United States
Status:
Released
Plot Keywords:

Related Movies To
The Princess and the Pirate
I'll admit that it has always puzzled me that war-weary American troops could ever have been entertained by Bob Hope. His so-called "zany" humour always struck me as being contrived and obvious. This film, however, does go some way to contradict that rather simplistic impression of the star. He plays a cowardly actor who finds himself along with "Princess Margaret" (no, not the real one) captured by pirates en route to their island to retrieve some buried treasure. When they discover her identity, they try to ransom her and it's all down to "Sylvester" (Hope) to save the day. It's got a great supporting cast - Walter Brennan as the aptly named "Featherhead"; Walter Slezak as pirate "La Roche" and an on-form Victor McLaglen as "The Hook". Virginia Mayo as the "Princess" never could act her way out of a paper bag, and here is no different - she has the glamour and the looks, but the charisma of a wet haddock. There are plenty of quippy one-liners; Mr. Hope's asides to the audience are actually quite funny now and again and coupled with some good, hammy, set piece buckle and swash it's actually quite a watchable little pantomime-style effort. Not great, but much better than I was expecting.
Cast & Crew of
The Princess and the Pirate
Directors & Credit Writers
BA
Barton Adams... Assistant Director
... Director
Cast
... Sylvester the Great
... Princess Margaret
... Featherhead
... La Roche
... Captain Barrett / The Hook
... Pedro
... Owner of the 'Bucket of Blood'
... Landlady of the 'Boar's Head Inn'
... Don José Ramon Sebastian Rurales
... Mr. Pelly
... Alonzo
... Captain of the 'Mary Ann'
... The King
... Goldwyn Girl (uncredited)
... Goldwyn Girl (uncredited)
... Margaret's Sweetheart (uncredited)
LD
Loretta Daye... Goldwyn Girl (uncredited)
... Drunken Pirate (uncredited)
... Pirate (uncredited)
... Goldwyn Girl (uncredited)
Produced By
... Producer