Während sie darauf wartet, auf Geheiß der heimtückischen Königin Elisabeth I. unrechtmäßig hingerichtet zu werden, sinnt die tragische Maria Stuart über eine Reihe grausamer politischer Intr... Alles lesenWährend sie darauf wartet, auf Geheiß der heimtückischen Königin Elisabeth I. unrechtmäßig hingerichtet zu werden, sinnt die tragische Maria Stuart über eine Reihe grausamer politischer Intrigen nach, die ihren Weg zum Schafott begründeten.Während sie darauf wartet, auf Geheiß der heimtückischen Königin Elisabeth I. unrechtmäßig hingerichtet zu werden, sinnt die tragische Maria Stuart über eine Reihe grausamer politischer Intrigen nach, die ihren Weg zum Schafott begründeten.
Fotos
Emil Heß
- Lord Douglas
- (as Emil Hess)
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Where does one start? Like all other films about Mary Queen of Scots the plot line veers dizzyingly from the actual events of her life (for example Bothwell is portrayed as her enemy whereas he was actually one of her staunchest supporters). Zarah Leander is badly miscast in the title role - she's just too old and too statuesque for the part. This is painfully highlighted in her scenes with her four Marys. They were actually chosen to be her companions and were roughly the same age as the queen. In this film she comes across as a mother hen figure or a favourite high-school teacher to a quartet of slim young lovlies. The effects of this miscasting are hard to convey to English speakers but the nearest I can come to is to imagine Joan Crawford in the role emoting as she did in Mildred Pierce. The result is one of inadvertent camp comedy especially when La Leander lays on the patient suffering act which was her trademark (especiallyin her walk to the block). The sets, though, are magnificent - wonderful fantasies on renaissance Scottish and English architecture. The costumes too are as near to accurate as possible although there are some oddities such as Darnley's natty line in weird pointy shoulder pads and mini-kilts. Could have done without the miserable dirges that they felt obliged to give Zarah to perform, but she had to sing I suppose as she was, basically, known as an operetta/musical star. As it was released in 1940 the propaganda message is as subtle as the Blitz - perfidious Albion (Queen Elizabeth 1) being horrible to poor suffering German womanhood. I was interested to see Das Hertz der Koenigin but wouldn't be in any hurry to repeat the experience.
Of the estimated 1,300 films in every genre made during the Third Reich only ten per cent could be classed as overtly propogandist, some of them notoriously so. However, the very few that come under the heading of 'Anti-English' are a comparatively harmless bunch that never seemed to do well commercially and had a minimal impact on the consciousness of German cinema goers. The passage of time now enables us to judge them solely upon their artistic merits.
Coming as it does from the Tempelhof Studios this film of Carl Froelich boasts superlative art direction, production design, cinematography and score.
As a piece of history it is of course absolute tosh and the liberties taken are too numerous to mention. Despite these inaccuracies it remains a thoroughly absorbing and moving depiction of one of history's most appealing and sympathetic characters.
Willy Birgel and Axel von Ambesser are adequate as Bothwell and Darnley but it is the three leading actresses whose performances impress. Lotte Koch is mesmerising as the duplicitous and vengeful Johanna Gordon as is the wonderful Maria Koppenhoeffer as Elizabeth 1 whose ruthlessness is revealed in her line: "Anyone who allows himself to be helped by England will die!" The way her part is written also allows us to see, behind the majesty, a lonely and loveless woman. Far from being loveless is the Mary of Zara Leander. Granted, in terms of age and physique she is totally miscast in the role but she possesses star quality in spades. She combines imperiousness with vulnerability here and as a bonus, has one of the most seductive voices in the history of cinema, both speaking and singing.
There is also a splendid cameo by Erich Ponto as an itinerant actor who assumes the function of a prophet of doom. He is best known to viewers as 'Vinkle, not Winkle' in 'The Third Man.'
500 years on it is difficult to appreciate just how much Catholicism was feared in this country and how very real was the threat of a Spanish invasion. Indeed, scarcely more than a year after Mary's head was separated from her body an Armada of 130 ships appeared on the horizon. Mary did get a revenge of sorts when in 1603 her son the Catholic James V1 of Scotland became James 1 of England.
Does the film succeed as propoganda? Goebbels certainly didn't think so but it was considered contentious enough by the Allies for it to be kept off the screen until the early fifties. Best to look upon it now as a well-made and entertaining piece of historical hokum.
Coming as it does from the Tempelhof Studios this film of Carl Froelich boasts superlative art direction, production design, cinematography and score.
As a piece of history it is of course absolute tosh and the liberties taken are too numerous to mention. Despite these inaccuracies it remains a thoroughly absorbing and moving depiction of one of history's most appealing and sympathetic characters.
Willy Birgel and Axel von Ambesser are adequate as Bothwell and Darnley but it is the three leading actresses whose performances impress. Lotte Koch is mesmerising as the duplicitous and vengeful Johanna Gordon as is the wonderful Maria Koppenhoeffer as Elizabeth 1 whose ruthlessness is revealed in her line: "Anyone who allows himself to be helped by England will die!" The way her part is written also allows us to see, behind the majesty, a lonely and loveless woman. Far from being loveless is the Mary of Zara Leander. Granted, in terms of age and physique she is totally miscast in the role but she possesses star quality in spades. She combines imperiousness with vulnerability here and as a bonus, has one of the most seductive voices in the history of cinema, both speaking and singing.
There is also a splendid cameo by Erich Ponto as an itinerant actor who assumes the function of a prophet of doom. He is best known to viewers as 'Vinkle, not Winkle' in 'The Third Man.'
500 years on it is difficult to appreciate just how much Catholicism was feared in this country and how very real was the threat of a Spanish invasion. Indeed, scarcely more than a year after Mary's head was separated from her body an Armada of 130 ships appeared on the horizon. Mary did get a revenge of sorts when in 1603 her son the Catholic James V1 of Scotland became James 1 of England.
Does the film succeed as propoganda? Goebbels certainly didn't think so but it was considered contentious enough by the Allies for it to be kept off the screen until the early fifties. Best to look upon it now as a well-made and entertaining piece of historical hokum.
A beautiful and moving film with some sequences of song and dumb-show leaving the spectator spellbound...a mix of the German sense of poetry and doom and of something almost like Bergman's Seventh Seal. Fine black and white photography, proper attention paid to every detail. Minor parts are all remarkable and even Birgel's swagger and Lotte Koch's half-dazed performance are intriguing. Zarah Leander at her best!
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThis film was produced during a cycle of lavish historical anti-British propaganda films made by UFA during the Nazi regime.
- PatzerIn the first scene of the movie Maria Stuart is playing Domino. This type of dominoes which were shown in the movie (with square halves) wasn't spread in Europe until the 18th century and it was first in Italy. While there are reports that Marco Polo brought them to Europe from China in the 13th-14th century and the word "domino" was known in the 1000s, the game itself looked completely different than in the movie.
- Zitate
Mary Queen of Scots: They can take my crown. But not my right.
- VerbindungenFeatured in Hitlers Frauen: Zarah Leander - Die Sängerin (2001)
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- Laufzeit1 Stunde 52 Minuten
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was Das Herz der Königin (1940) officially released in Canada in English?
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