CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.5/10
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TU CALIFICACIÓN
El hijo del sheik y una bailarina se enamoran, pero cuando le hacen creer que ella le ha traicionado él busca venganza.El hijo del sheik y una bailarina se enamoran, pero cuando le hacen creer que ella le ha traicionado él busca venganza.El hijo del sheik y una bailarina se enamoran, pero cuando le hacen creer que ella le ha traicionado él busca venganza.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 3 premios ganados en total
Vilma Bánky
- Yasmin
- (as Vilma Banky)
Montagu Love
- Ghabah
- (as Montague Love)
Bynunsky Hyman
- Mountebank
- (as Binunsky Hyman)
Harry Blassingame
- One of Sheik's Men
- (sin créditos)
Earl Gordon Bostwick
- Bit Part
- (sin créditos)
Erwin Connelly
- The Zouve
- (sin créditos)
William Donovan
- S'rir
- (sin créditos)
Charles Requa
- Pierre - Ahmed's Friend
- (sin créditos)
Opiniones destacadas
This was Valentino's last film, and he is excellent in it, but it is far from being his best film (as many critics claim). Certainly "Camille", "The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse", "The Eagle" and "The Conquering Power" are much better films. This was designed as a rollicking and sexy adventure film, with large doses of cheap slapstick humour, and on that level succeeds admirably. That famous scene where Valentino ravishes Vilma Banky is extraordinary, and Valentino shows real talent in portraying both the son and the father (he is almost unrecognisable in the latter role). Great split screen work allows the two Valentinos to inter-relate well too.
The film makes you wonder what this talented and beautiful man may have achieved had he lived. Would he have made it in talkies? It's hard to believe such charisma would ever fail.
The film makes you wonder what this talented and beautiful man may have achieved had he lived. Would he have made it in talkies? It's hard to believe such charisma would ever fail.
I only just watched 'Son of the Sheik' on dvd last night and was amazed at the textures of cinematography and the natural un-histrionic flow of the performances. While it may not be very profound or innovative, it never set out to be, and it is a far better flick than I expected, very rounded and organic and effortless. Vilma Banky is lovely and appropriately lowkey, and Valentino is every bit as exciting to watch as his celebrity maintained. Ahmed is NOT a character performance, Oscar material or anything, but Valentino instills this cardboard figure with the warmth of life, a quickening of the pulse, all very controlled and tasteful and humanly affecting rather than superhumanly virile. Of course he looks gorgeous, but so does the film itself. Some of the slapstick may seem dated by now, but then what about 'American Pie'.
I recently saw the Son of the Sheik at an old movie house in Los Angeles. It was complete with the Wurlitzer theater pipe organ -- live accompaniment for this rare gem! I was in awe at how sophisticated and enchanting this movie was. I remarked to my husband that it reminded me of one of my trashy love novels. It was so perfect. I remember reading somewhere that Rudolph Valentino's fame came from the fact that he was so dark and handsome and muscular as opposed to the little pasty boys that had existed before him in the cinema. The scene where he exacts his revenge on Yasmin and ravishes her....was wonderful. His dark eyes as he looked at her in the close-ups.......ahhhhh. This movie truly was a treat. The desert scenes, the lush scenery and sumptuous costumes create a wonderful lavish movie. Valentino was taken from the cinema world far too early....but at least we have these lavish movies to remember him by.
If anyone has heard about Valentino and wants to see what all the fuss was about, The Son of the Sheik is an excellent way to do so. Here he is five years past the overacting he exhibited in parts of the earlier installment. To top it off, he plays dual roles: the son and the father. And he does both admirably. The shots of the two characters in the same frame - touching each other, no less - are flawlessly executed. Generally, this is standard melodrama culminating in physical battles between the good guys and the bad guys and a final chase. Along the way we get a lot of exotic set pieces, lavishly furnished desert tents, horses racing across the dunes, smoky cafes in which dancing girls wriggle for tossed coins and a grand palace with spacious rooms and shiny floors. The intimate scenes between Valentino and the beauteous Vilma Banky are more sensuous than those of the previous film. Clips from these scenes will be familiar to anyone who has ever seen Valentino references in documentaries. Agnes Ayres reprises her role from The Sheik as Diana Mayo, now the wife of the older sheik and mother of his son, and she appears to have aged 20 years but is no less attractive. For Valentino, Banky and Ayres alone this is a treat.
Just to answer ClaudeCat's question, "It really made me wonder about the time period: did women of the 20's enjoy seeing rape fantasies onscreen, because of different attitudes about women and sex? Or was this something filmmakers of
the period imagined women wanted to see, and the fans put up with it in order to enjoy the sight of Rudolph's face?" the film was quite remarkably based on a
book written by a WOMAN and the script also was written by a WOMAN. This is
something I found very shocking when I first studied this film in film class. The rape in this film in many ways functions the same way the rape scene did in
"Gone With the Wind." In fact, in both cases, many people don't even call them rape scenes, even though in both a woman is taken against her will. Many
theories about this revolve around the fact that Valentino was this exotic, sexy, foreigner that women secretly wanted to kidnap them from their dull,
homebound lives and their conservative husbands. This is in a way what
psychologists call a "rape fantasy." Whereas a real rape, the woman has no
control, in a fantasy, even though she imagines being taken by force, she is
really the one making the rules, because she is imagining it, much as the female writer of "The Son of the Sheik" may have her character be ravished, but is really the one in control of what Valentino does. One important thing to note is a rape fantasy doesn't mean the woman actually wants to be raped in real life.
the period imagined women wanted to see, and the fans put up with it in order to enjoy the sight of Rudolph's face?" the film was quite remarkably based on a
book written by a WOMAN and the script also was written by a WOMAN. This is
something I found very shocking when I first studied this film in film class. The rape in this film in many ways functions the same way the rape scene did in
"Gone With the Wind." In fact, in both cases, many people don't even call them rape scenes, even though in both a woman is taken against her will. Many
theories about this revolve around the fact that Valentino was this exotic, sexy, foreigner that women secretly wanted to kidnap them from their dull,
homebound lives and their conservative husbands. This is in a way what
psychologists call a "rape fantasy." Whereas a real rape, the woman has no
control, in a fantasy, even though she imagines being taken by force, she is
really the one making the rules, because she is imagining it, much as the female writer of "The Son of the Sheik" may have her character be ravished, but is really the one in control of what Valentino does. One important thing to note is a rape fantasy doesn't mean the woman actually wants to be raped in real life.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThis is the oldest sequel to be inducted into the National Film Registry.
- ErroresThe opening credits show "COPYRIGHT MCMXXXVII" (1937) although the film was released in 1926.
- Citas
Title card: The night was young at Cafe Maure. Not a knife had been thrown - so far.
- Versiones alternativasIn 1937, Artcinema Associates re-released a version of this movie with a soundtrack written by Artur Guttmann and Gerard Carbonara. Scenes were probably cut to conform to the production code, then rigorously enforced.
- ConexionesEdited from El sheik (1921)
- Bandas sonorasSon of the Sheik
(1926)
Music by Miro Mosay
Lyrics by Edwin Powell
Published in connection with this movie
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- How long is The Son of the Sheik?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
Taquilla
- Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 1,562,733
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 4,360,000
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 8min(68 min)
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.33 : 1
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