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  1. Later, the prisoner is forced to stand in the hot sun which causes the mask to heat up, tormenting him further. And all the time the tight fit of the mask prevents him from uttering anything but unintelligible yelps. Also, in one scene, an innkeeper's pretty daughter has her face slashed by a rapier-wielding henchman of the wicked Duke.

  2. 6 de may. de 2016 · The Man in the Iron Mask was a prisoner arrested in 1669 and held in the Bastille and other French jails for more than three decades, until his death in 1703. His identity has been an enduring ...

  3. Credited in some source books to Lee Kresel, the French-made Prisoner of the Iron Mask was actually directed by Francesco DeFeo. This colorful if occasionally empty-headed swashbuckler concerns an evil count, who imprisons the patriot (Michael Lemoine) who bears proof of the count's perfidy.

  4. 1 de ago. de 2023 · Alex Ledsom 01 August 2023. The Man in the Iron Mask isn’t just a Hollywood film. It’s a real story about a man who was kept imprisoned, moved from place to place and whose identity has never been fully revealed or discovered. One of his prisons was on the Iles de Lérins, just off the coast of Cannes, a spectacular place that you can visit.

  5. The iron-masked prisoner who resided in the Sainte Marguerite castle was an enigma to the world outside. His face, always hidden behind the iron mask, was never revealed to anyone. He was seen only at the iron-barred window of his prison cell, where he often stood for hours looking out at the sea, or playing mournful tunes on his guitar.

  6. The historical background. King Louis XIV, the man who confined the mysterious prisoner. The Man in the Iron Mask was confined in the French penal system between 1669 and 1703, the year in which he died. At this time, France was ruled by Louis XIV (1638-1715), who is often known as the ‘Sun King’. He was monarch of France from a very young age.

  7. The political prisoner of Louis XIV of France known as the Man in the Iron Mask was brought to the Bastille on Sept. 18, 1698. He died there on Nov. 19, 1703. He was named for the mask he was made to wear to keep his identity a secret. The mask was actually made of black velvet but was later mistakenly recorded in legend as consisting of iron.