• Newly Released
  • Popular
  • Actors
MySite
  • Newly Released
  • Popular
  • Actors
My Favorites ❤️

Services
BrandingDesignMarketingAdvertisement
Company
About usContactJobsPress kit
Social
Movie 1

The Emperor's Candlesticks

1937-07-02
89 minutes
DramaHistoryRomance
4.7

Spies on opposite sides fall in love in pre-revolutionary Russia.

Country : United States of AmericaLanguage : en

Cast:

Movie 1

William Powell

Baron Stephan Wolensky

Movie 1

Luise Rainer

Countess Olga Mironova

Movie 1

Robert Young

Grand Duke Peter

Movie 1

Maureen O'Sullivan

Maria Orlich

Similer Movies:

Movie 1
Drama

Inside the Lines

Movie 1
Drama
Romance

Casablanca

Movie 1
Thriller
Romance
Mystery

Notorious

Movie 1
Drama
Thriller
Movie 1

Frank Morgan

Colonel Baron Suroff

Movie 1

Henry Stephenson

Prince Johann

Movie 1

Bernadene Hayes

Mitzi Reisenbach

Movie 1

Donald Kirke

Anton, the Thief

Movie 1

Douglass Dumbrille

Mr. Korum, a Conspirator

Movie 1

Charles Waldron

Dr. Malchor, a Conspirator

23

Movie 1
Drama
Thriller
History

The Good Shepherd

Movie 1
Action
Adventure
Comedy
War
Romance

The General

TMDP Top Reviews:

CinemaSerf

Based on the Baroness Orczy tale of Russian Imperial espionage, this is actually quite a fun, if insubstantial, historical drama. It all centres around attempts to free a Polish dissident from prison. At the time, Poland was a vassal of the Czar, and so a group of influential Poles coerce the Grand Duke "Peter" (Robert Young) to write to his father imploring his intervention. What's this got to do with candlesticks, you might think? Well these clever little ornate gadgets have secret compartments - easy enough to smuggle a letter in. When they are inadvertently moved, then sold-on a few times it falls to Polish agent "Wolensky" (William Powell) to stay one step ahead of his Czarist protagonist "Countess Mironova" (Luise Rainer) and recover them before their secret is discovered and heads start to roll. Of course, you just know that these two are going to start to fall for each other, and sadly that is where the thriller element of this film starts to give way to the romantic one, and once we are in full slush mode, the whole thing rather falls away as we approach an ending that offers us little by way of jeopardy. It's a good looking film, though. Plenty of attractive people in attractive costumes; there is some chemistry between Powell and Rainer and Frank Morgan is quite fun as "Baron Suroff". Franz Waxman provides us with a rather unremarkably derivative score though - a sort of "Scarlet Empress" (1934) type affair that doesn't really help the rather uninspiring dialogue. It's my kind of genre and the Baroness did know how to conjure up a good intrigue, but this is all just a bit too join-the dots.