The Scarlet Empress

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The Scarlet Empress

French movie poster for L'Impératrice Rouge (The Scarlet Empress)
Directed by Josef von Sternberg
Produced by Emanuel Cohen
Josef von Sternberg
Starring Marlene Dietrich
John Davis Lodge
Sam Jaffe
Louise Dresser
Maria Sieber
Cinematography Bert Glennon
Editing by Josef von Sternberg
Sam Winston
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
Release date(s) Flag of United States September 15, 1934
Running time 95 min.
Country USA
Language English
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

The Scarlet Empress is a 1934 historical drama film made by Paramount Pictures about the life of Catherine the Great (Catherine II). It was directed and produced by Josef von Sternberg, with Emanuel Cohen as executive producer, from a screenplay by Eleanor McGeary, based on the diary of Catherine II, arranged by Manuel Komroff.

The film stars Marlene Dietrich as Catherine, with John Davis Lodge, Sam Jaffe, C. Aubrey Smith, Louise Dresser and Maria Riva. Dietrich's daughter Maria Riva (later known as Maria Sieber) plays Catherine as a child.

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Sophia Frederica (Marlene Dietrich), is the daughter of a minor German prince and an ambitious mother. She is brought to Russia by Count Alexei (John Lodge) to marry the half-wit Grand Duke Peter (Sam Jaffe). As if her marriage is not torment enough, she must endure the excesses of her husband's aunt, Empress Elizabeth (Louise Dresser). Elizabeth renames her Catherine and awards her the Order of St. Catherine.

Catherine finds solace with Count Alexei, but he begins wooing the much-older Elizabeth. Catherine finds lovers among the Russian army. When the old Empress dies, Catherine ascends to the Russian throne, knowing full well that her addled husband would kill her at the slightest provocation. Soon her power outstrips Peter's, and the opportunistic Alexei now comes back into her life. The finale finds Catherine emerging triumphant over all her enemies and the new Empress is shown astride a horse, to whom she displays far more affection than any of her human compatriots.

The film is notable for its expressionist art design: in Robin Wood's words, von Sternberg creates for the Russian palace

"a hyperrealist atmosphere of nightmare with its gargoyles, its grotesque figures twisted into agonized contortions, its enormous doors that require a half-dozen women to close or open, its dark spaces and ominous shadows created by the flickerings of innumerable candles, its skeleton presiding over the royal wedding banquet table."[1]

This decor is historically inaccurate, as Grand Duke Peter in fact preferred Neoclassical art and architecture.[citation needed]

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