Development The charge had been previously portrayed in a British film,
The Jaws of Death (1930). Warner Bros. was inspired to make the film after
Lives of a Bengal Lancer (1935) had been released to great popularity, ushering in a series of
British Empire adventure tales. Michel Jacoby had developed a story based on the famous charge but, although Warners bought Jacoby's script, the final script was closer to
Lives of a Bengal Lancer. An original working title for the film was
The Charge of the 600. portrayed Flynn's character's brother Warner Bros. wanted an all-British cast.
Errol Flynn (Australian, but initially ballyhooed by the studio publicity department as Irish) had made such a strong impression in
Captain Blood that he was removed from supporting
Fredric March in
Anthony Adverse to play the lead in
Charge of the Light Brigade.
Ian Hunter was connected to the film early on.
Anita Louise was announced as the female lead.
Patric Knowles had just joined Warner Bros. at the recommendation of
Irving Asher in London, the same man who recommended Errol Flynn. He was given the crucial supporting role of Flynn's brother, which was perfect since Flynn and Knowles looked almost exactly alike at the time. The film provides an early, important supporting role for David Niven.
Edward G. Robinson tested for the role as the lead villain Surat Khan.
Basil Rathbone was also considered before
C. Henry Gordon was finally cast.
Shooting Principal photography began in April 1936. During filming on location at Lone Pine California, the studio's camera unit helped put out a fire that started at a restaurant across the road from where the actors were staying. Some of the location shooting was done in Mexico where there were fewer restrictions on harming animals during production.
The Charge sequence The film comes to a climax at the
Battle of Balaclava, subject of
Lord Tennyson's poem. The lancers charge into the valley, braving the heavy Russian cannon fire, and many are killed. Text from Tennyson's poem is superimposed on screen, coupled with
Max Steiner's musical score. Director
Michael Curtiz, who did not have an excellent command of English, shouted "Bring on the empty horses," meaning the "riderless horses"; David Niven used this as the title of his second autobiographical memoir about the
Golden Age of Hollywood. The battlefield set was lined with
tripwires to trip the charging cavalry horses. For the filming of this climax, 125 horses were tripped; of those, 25 were killed or put down afterward. Errol Flynn, an accomplished horseman, was outraged by the animal cruelty and by director Michael Curtiz's seeming indifference. He attacked Curtiz, but they were pulled apart before any serious damage was done. The film's charge sequence later forced the
U.S. Congress to ensure the safety of animals in future motion pictures; the
ASPCA followed suit and banned tripwires from all films. Unlike Flynn's other blockbusters, because of the number of horses killed during the charge sequence, the film was never re-released by Warner Bros. It would not be seen again until 1956, when the company sold the rights to it and other pre-1950 films to
Associated Artists Productions, after which it subsequently premiered on television. This scene was later used in the music video for the hit song "
The Trooper" by
Iron Maiden which was famously banned by
MTV. ==Stylized as a cenotaph in opening credits==