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- Superfecund twins Louis and Lucien, who can feel pain from each other's injuries, revolt against a tyrannical regent who holds France under his iron fist.
- After their parents are killed, co-joined twin boys are separated, with one raised as a gentleman in Paris and the other in the mountains becoming a bandit.
- In the 18th century were born two siamese brothers on Corsica who paradoxically carry different feelings of hate and reconciliation in their blood.
- Siamese twins separated at birth retain a psychic link - each feels the other's pain and happiness.
- The Dumas story about Siamese twins separated at birth but who have a strong psychic link.
- A vendetta between two Corsican families is the background to Alexandre Dumas 's story of the strange bond between Siamese twin brothers, who are separated at birth.
- The ghost of a man's twin shows him a vision of how he was killed in a duel.
- A man dies in a duel and his twin brother arrives from Corsica, and falls in love with the same woman his brother loved. He also joins a conspiracy in which his dead brother was involved.
- Although separated at birth, Siamese twins Fabien and Louis de Franchi remain united emotionally. One day, Parisian Emilie de Lesparre arrives in their Corsican village with her father, and both brothers fall in love with her. Louis goes to Paris to study law and sees Emilie often, but Emilie loves Fabien who has remained in Corsica with their mother. While attending a dinner given by another admirer of Emilie's, M. Chateau Renaud, Louis is drawn into a duel with Renaud and killed. Back home, Fabien senses what has happened and journeys to Paris to avenge his brother's death. After he kills Renaud in a duel, Emilie finally confesses her love to Fabien.
- A modernized version of the Alexandre Dumas classic.
- Documentary of the making of the Cheech & Chong comedy.
- Fabien and Louis are twins and so close is the tie that binds them that the emotions of one are immediately shared by his twin brother. Consequently, when Louis falls in love with Emilie de Lesparre, Fabien at once follows suit. Emilie and her father return to Paris and Louis decides to follow. Fabien remains home with his mother. Arriving in Paris, Louis receives a warm welcome from Emilie, much to the chagrin of M. Chateau Renaud, who, thinking he had won Emilie's love, sees in Louis a rival. His fears are soon realized, for Emilie turns from him. Out of revenge he decides to compromise her, and to this end, he induces her, under a pretext, to attend a Bohemian supper to be held after a masked ball. Not content with this, and in order to still further humiliate her, he makes a wager with one of his friends that he will bring her there by four o'clock. He had not foreseen, however, that Louis would attend the supper. On the stroke of four, Renaud and Emilie enter the supper room. Emilie is terrified to find herself in such company and, seeing Louis among the guests, asks him to escort her home. Renaud, furious at Louis' interference, strikes him and a challenge follows. Louis and Renaud meet the next day and Renaud quickly runs him through. The thrust that pierces Louis' breast is felt by his brother Fabien in Corsica, who at once fears for Louis' safety. His fears are realized that evening by the appearance of Louis' spirit. Fabien swears to avenge his brother's death and leaves for Paris, where he meets Renaud and, on the self-same spot where Louis was killed, he kills Renaud in a fierce encounter. His brother being thus avenged, he rides to the home of Emilie and comforts her with the news that Renaud is dead and Louis avenged.
- Set in Corsica and Paris in the year 1841, this classic tale of identical twin boys who live separately but sense each others presence has been brought to the screen in this high quality entertaining animated feature for your kids and family.
- The Corsican Brothers, Nap and Bony, both fall in love with the Count's daughter. Nap is fat and Bony is thin. Naturally, the fat brother falls the harder. The Count does not approve of his daughter's suitor, so he sends the soul of poor Nap to Elysium. The thin brother is left alone, but the fat one's spirit hovers near to guide and protect him. The Count finds it incumbent upon himself to continue his warfare on the remaining Corsican. He calls for a duel in the woods. Secretly, he instructs one of his soldiers to take a cannon behind the hill and fire at the brother while he is dueling with the Count. Thus does the cruel father mean to dispose a second time of his daughter's true love. The duel begins. It is some duel, for both the Count and the Corsican are fancy fencers. When, at last, the cannon goes off, the ball strikes the ground near the Corsican. Bony hurls it back at the man who shot it with such force that the soldier drops dead. The Count picks up a huge stick. But every time he tries to bring it down upon the head of the thin brother, the soul of the fat one appears, seizes the club and suspends it in mid-air. The bewildered Count cannot account for this trick. At last he gives it up. The thin brother wins the Count's daughter, while the soul of the fat brother, having saved Bony from destruction, ascends on high amidst the strains of hallelujah music.
- Fabian and Louis are identical twins, separated at birth and each unaware of the other's existence. But there is a psychic contact between them which gradually brings them together.
- Although separated at birth, formerly conjoined twins Louis and Lucien can still feel each other's emotions, even at a distance.