Childhood friends are torn apart when one of them marries the woman the other fiercely loves.Childhood friends are torn apart when one of them marries the woman the other fiercely loves.Childhood friends are torn apart when one of them marries the woman the other fiercely loves.
- Director
- Writers
- Benjamin Glazer(screen play)
- Hermann Sudermann(from the novel "The Undying Past" by)
- Marian Ainslee(titles)
- Stars
Top credits
- Director
- Writers
- Benjamin Glazer(screen play)
- Hermann Sudermann(from the novel "The Undying Past" by)
- Marian Ainslee(titles)
- Stars
- Awards
- 1 win
Marc McDermott
- Count von Rhaden
- (as Marc MacDermott)
Margie Angus
- Twin
- (uncredited)
Mary Angus
- Twin
- (uncredited)
Max Barwyn
- Ball Guest
- (uncredited)
Frankie Darro
- Boy Who Dances with Hertha
- (uncredited)
Philippe De Lacy
- Leo as a Boy
- (uncredited)
Virginia Marshall
- Hertha as a Girl
- (uncredited)
Polly Moran
- Family Retainer with Bouquet
- (uncredited)
Maurice Murphy
- Ulrich as a Boy
- (uncredited)
Russ Powell
- Family Retainer with Flag
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- Benjamin Glazer(screen play)
- Hermann Sudermann(from the novel "The Undying Past" by)
- Marian Ainslee(titles)
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe film's female co-star Barbara Kent, and its co-writer Frederica Sagor Maas both lived to be over 100. Kent died on October 13, 2011 at the age of 103 whereas Sagor Maas died on January 5, 2012 at the age of 111, making her one of the few supercentenarians well known for reasons other than longevity. In addition, the movie's director Clarence Brown also happened to live to the ripe old age of 97.
- GoofsWhen Leo is talking to Felicitas on the bench in the park and tells her that he must go to Africa, the position of the collar of his overcoat repeatedly changes from pulled up to flat.
- Quotes
Pastor Voss: My boy, when the devil cannot reach us through the spirit... he creates a woman beautiful enough to reach us through the flesh.
- Alternate versionsAn alternate ending (included on the "Garbo Silents" DVD release of 2005) continues on from Leo and Ulrich embracing to show Leo deciding to strike up a relationship with Hertha. According to Garbo biographer Barry Paris (speaking on the DVD commentary track), this happy ending was shot by the director under protest.
- ConnectionsEdited into Hollywood: The Dream Factory (1972)
Review
Featured review
Chemistry between Garbo and Gilbert the highlight
The chemistry between Greta Garbo and John Gilbert is the highlight of this film and the main reason to watch it. Their loving caresses, deep open mouthed kisses, and the eye contact they make when they're with the other guy in this love triangle (Lars Hanson, who may as well be nameless) all reflect the feelings they had off the screen as well. Garbo is a master at mesmerizing little gestures, such as the way she holds the cigarette in her mouth in the scene that includes the line "You know... when you blow out the match... that's an invitation to kiss you...?" Gilbert is strong as well, and shows more range here than usual (among other things, I loved how he acted during that duel). Lastly, while all eyes are on Garbo, I was drawn to diminutive Barbara Kent (4'11"), whose character is also certainly more endearing.
Unfortunately, the film is saddled with the whole woman as satanic temptress thing, punctuated by a fire and brimstone sermon that quotes scripture in case we don't get it. If you look closely, you'll notice that the pastor has a cigarette holder that features a figurine of reclining woman showing off her shapely legs, a small moment that shows his hypocrisy in an otherwise very moralistic tale. The film also needed editing - it spends too much time on silly scenes early on (e.g. showing long nonsensical words in "German", military formations, weak jokes with a pair of twins, etc), and overall should have been about a half hour shorter. Lastly, the story is a little hokey even for a melodrama, for example, it seemed odd that the blood brothers wouldn't communicate better while one of them went away, and the ending is silly too. All of this takes away from the magic of Garbo/Gilbert, but there's enough of that to make it worth watching nonetheless.
Unfortunately, the film is saddled with the whole woman as satanic temptress thing, punctuated by a fire and brimstone sermon that quotes scripture in case we don't get it. If you look closely, you'll notice that the pastor has a cigarette holder that features a figurine of reclining woman showing off her shapely legs, a small moment that shows his hypocrisy in an otherwise very moralistic tale. The film also needed editing - it spends too much time on silly scenes early on (e.g. showing long nonsensical words in "German", military formations, weak jokes with a pair of twins, etc), and overall should have been about a half hour shorter. Lastly, the story is a little hokey even for a melodrama, for example, it seemed odd that the blood brothers wouldn't communicate better while one of them went away, and the ending is silly too. All of this takes away from the magic of Garbo/Gilbert, but there's enough of that to make it worth watching nonetheless.
helpful•20
- gbill-74877
- Apr 19, 2019
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $373,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 52 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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