This four-part subject from the Savoia studios has been elaborately staged. There are picturesque backgrounds, among others of the Mediterranean and Monte Carlo. The interiors, especially the theater scenes, are of unusual size. Mlle. Helios has the role of Clara Dramy, an opera singer who transfers her none-too-strong regard from a count to Marquis George d'Ark, finely played by M. Delcolle. With the marquis she falls deeply in love, which is reciprocated, the former ignoring an old-time sweetheart. When the marquis through her extravagance gets into debt she goes to the count for assistance. His price is that she returns to him, which reluctantly she does. The ending is a double tragedy, the death of the old marquis when he learns of his son's misconduct and the suicide of the actress when she is denounced by the younger marquis. The love-making is much in evidence; to some it will be offensively so. The picture is well acted as well as well produced, but it is essentially European in theme and treatment. - The Moving Picture World, November 28, 1914