The Soldier and the Lady (1937) Directed by George Nichols Jr.
Action / Adventure / History / War / Romance
aka: Michael Strogoff
Film Review
The Adventures of Michael Strogoff
(also released under the title The
Soldier and the Lady) started out as a French production
released in 1936. The following year, RKO bought the rights to
make an English language version of the film, with new scenes shot in
Hollywood intercut with scenes lifted from the original French
version. Jules Verne's novel loses some of its coherence along
the way but an excellent Anton Walbrook in the title role just about
holds the thing together. Whilst the new sequences shot in
Hollywood lack the atmosphere of the original footage the splicing
together of what is essentially two films isn't quite as jarring as you
might expect. The editing is pacey but erratic in places and the
characters are generally too thinly sketched to be convincing.
The one saving grace is the introduction of Eric Blore and Edward
Brophy as a pair of bungling newspapermen - they provide some very
welcome comic relief.
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Film Synopsis
The Russian Empire is threatened with being torn in two when, in 1879, the
Tartar prince Feofar Khan leads an uprising, allying himself with the Mongol
hordes. Michael Strogoff is sent by Tsar Alexander II to the distant
town of Irkutsk to warn its governor, the Grand Duke Vladimir, of the threat
posed by the Tartar rebellion. During the long train journey, Strogoff
encounters an attractive woman, Zangarra, who, unbeknown to him, is a spy
in the employ of the traitor Ivan Ogareff. He also meets Nadia Fedor,
who is on her way to join up with her father, a disgraced political prisoner,
in Irkutsk. In a Tartar attack, Nadia is captured and Strogoff narrowly
escapes with some minor wounds. When Ogareff orders an old woman to
be flogged, Strogoff gives away his identity by identifying the woman as
his mother. He is sentenced to be blinded, but Zangarra comes to his
aid, paying him back from saving her life earlier. Reunited with Nadia,
Strogoff resumes his mission, but Ogareff is one step ahead of him...
Script: Jules Verne (novel),
Mortimer Offner (play), Anthony Veiller (play),
Anne Morrison Chapin (play)
Cinematographer: Joseph H. August
Music: Nathaniel Shilkret
Cast: Anton Walbrook (Michael Strogoff),
Elizabeth Allan (Nadia),
Akim Tamiroff (Ogareff),
Margot Grahame (Zangarra),
Fay Bainter (Strogoff's Mother),
Eric Blore (Blount),
Edward Brophy (Packer),
Paul Guilfoyle (Vasiley),
William Stack (Grand Duke),
Paul Harvey (Tsar),
Michael Visaroff (Innkeeper),
Oscar Apfel (Tsar's General),
Margaret Armstrong (Gypsy Woman),
Matthew Betz (Chieftain),
Ward Bond (Tartar Chief),
Lynton Brent (Sailor),
Leonard Ceeley (Tsar's Aide),
Harry Cording (Peasant),
Helen Jerome Eddy (Shepherd's Wife),
Budd Fine
Country: USA
Language: English
Support: Black and White
Runtime: 82 min
Aka:Michael Strogoff ;
The Bandit and the Lady
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