Un joven seductor con un pasado misterioso traza un plan sin escrúpulos para introducirse en la familia de la condesa Ornstein a cualquier precio. Nadie puede resistirse a su presencia, su b... Leer todoUn joven seductor con un pasado misterioso traza un plan sin escrúpulos para introducirse en la familia de la condesa Ornstein a cualquier precio. Nadie puede resistirse a su presencia, su belleza y juventud, a su inmoral poder.Un joven seductor con un pasado misterioso traza un plan sin escrúpulos para introducirse en la familia de la condesa Ornstein a cualquier precio. Nadie puede resistirse a su presencia, su belleza y juventud, a su inmoral poder.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
- Premios
- 1 nominación en total
- Helmuth Von Ornstein
- (as Anthony Corlan)
- Klaus
- (as Wolfried Lier)
- Bobby
- (as Despo)
Reseñas destacadas
I imagine this is available on DVD and video. Even the unknown films of the 70's had some expert screenwriters and this one probably didn't even make a dime. Beautiful terrain and cinematography make this a delightful piece with real wit and class. An 8 out of 10! Best performance = A. Lansbury.
The dichotomy between classes has never been more closely paralleled in film: on one hand there is the starving, eager and willing to do anything young Konrad (Michael York) and on the other the Countess von Ornstein she of by gone nobility. Countess or now, she too is starving, clinging to a past which has not only faded, but threatens at any minute to disintegrate. Her prospects poor she does what she must. Lansbury's Countess is priceless and she plays it with an unlikely combination of superego and hopeless despair and she is brilliant. A tour-de-force.
If released today the film would be at the top of every best 10 list and be talked about salaciously at every Starbucks.
With nazis hiding in the woodwork, sexual weaponry, misplaced romantic feelings, murder, social climbing combining with delicious Bavarian countryside, castles, beer gardens, stunning mountain vistas and even Wagnerian opera, Prince gives us a fairy tale gone wrong. Wondrously, terribly and gloriously wrong.
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Who is Konrad anyway? Throughout the whole movie, audience has no inkling of his past, like a tabusa rasa, he pops up from nowhere, and miracle comes about around him just like the butterfly of a rare species landing on his hand in the opening, he can always find "something for everyone", a miracle worker indeed, but morbidly, with a tendency of homicide if he sees fit. Chirpily injecting its daringly amoral keynote with a tongue-in-cheek mischief, the story sends Konrad rising through ranks, and plays up his pansexuality with utter candidness. Soon Konrad incubates a scheme to bring affluence and glory back to the castle, through a marriage arrangement between Herthe's son Helmuth (a wiry and delectable Higgins) and Anneliese (Weis), the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Pleschke (Gill and Meineke respectively), a nouveau riche couple salivating for aristocratic luxury.
But there is a catch, both Helmuth and Anneliese are Konrad's lovers (and clearly he has a preference), the aftermath of their disastrous honeymoon drives Konrad's plan to an almost breaking point, but thankfully, the marriage is official and money is secured, so it is just a matter of dispensing with those unwelcome nuisances, between the patrician and the parvenu, it is a cinch to guess when side Prince/Konrad is inclined to choose by thinking on their feet.
Konrad's star is rising, he cannot get a break, Herthe is swept off her feet eventually, a marriage proposal, however scandalous, is propounded, and he is in no place to decline, in the final twist, there is someone in the upper crust finally can give Konrad a good run for his money, it is neither the self-involving Herthe, nor the effete Helmuth, but a cherubic lass who sees through Konrad's trickery and ploys, and gets what she always want through blackmail without hazarding her own safety, now we are talking about a film truly merits a sequel treatment.
Angela Lansbury entrancingly flaunts royal poise and rhetoric, a facade she nails on the stage but rarely opens to his film audience, and Michael York, is such a unique leading man, angular, confident, charisma-oozing, and the pride in his eyes is undiminished. As a comedy ruthlessly sends up a morally conscious society, this little-seen picture is a blast from the past, and worth being dusted off to, at the very least, give a scare to the prim, proper and prudish.
This movie is such a classic I am surprised that it is ignored by TCM, the Independent Film Channel and every other cable movie channel out there. It is just unbelievable what a mistake they are all making in not showing this movie. The rant by Angela Lansbury after the party is one of her greatest scenes and I show it to everyone young person who think they know all there is to know about her. It seems none of them have even heard of this movie. What a shame that fact is.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesRenowned theater personality Harold Prince's debut as a movie director, and one of only two theatrical movies he has ever directed.
- Citas
Helmuth Von Ornstein: You'll sleep with anyone, won't you?
Konrad Ludwig: Well....yes... but I do have my preferences!
- ConexionesFeatured in Homo Promo (1991)
- Banda sonoraWeil du so schon tanzen kannst
Music and Lyrics by Hans Otter
Selecciones populares
- How long is Something for Everyone?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
Taquilla
- Recaudación en Estados Unidos y Canadá
- 297.492 US$
- Duración1 hora 52 minutos
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.85 : 1