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TU CALIFICACIÓN
Agrega una trama en tu idiomaA convent girl is abducted and seduced by a prince before being sent off to a brothel in East Africa.A convent girl is abducted and seduced by a prince before being sent off to a brothel in East Africa.A convent girl is abducted and seduced by a prince before being sent off to a brothel in East Africa.
- Premios
- 1 premio ganado en total
Sylvia Ashton
- Kelly's Aunt
- (sin créditos)
Wilson Benge
- Prince Wolfram's Valet
- (sin créditos)
Sidney Bracey
- Prince Wolfram's Lackey
- (sin créditos)
Rae Daggett
- Coughdrops
- (sin créditos)
Robert Frazier
- Catholic Priest
- (sin créditos)
Florence Gibson
- Kelly's Aunt
- (sin créditos)
Madge Hunt
- Mother Superior
- (sin créditos)
Tully Marshall
- Jan Vryheid
- (sin créditos)
Ann Morgan
- Maid Escorting Kelly to Altar
- (sin créditos)
Madame Sul-Te-Wan
- Kali Sana - Aunt's Cook
- (sin créditos)
Lucille Van Lent
- Prince Wolfram's Maid
- (sin créditos)
Wilhelm von Brincken
- Prince Wolfram's Adjutant
- (sin créditos)
Gordon Westcott
- Lackey
- (sin créditos)
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opinión destacada
This is Director Eric Von Stroheim's last film, produced by it's star, Gloria Swanson. There is much to be learned from the commentaries and additional features on the deluxe Kino DVD of this silent film. The film itself is a wonderful lesson in film-making of its period. Von Stroheim loved to take shots of all the props and costume details of a character believing that this focus on detail told you more about the character than the actor alone could convey. This technique was later perfected by Hitchcock, where details shots are followed by reaction shots to move the story and emotional life along.
QUEEN KELLY is the story of a convent girl who falls in love with a dissipated prince who is promised to a debauched Queen. By today's standard, Seena Owen's performance as the queen is laughably over the top; she slithers and glowers and when she's really angry, she seems to have something stuck in her eye. Swanson herself was the prototype of today's tiny body, big head build favored in television. In her long shots her build looks almost like a pygmy, especially in comparison to Owen. But Swanson has that riveting face, and remains really a fine actress. The interview sections done as introductions to a television viewing of QUEEN KELLY show her to have retained those gorgeous and expressive eyes. This was considered her last film as a real ingénue - she was a bit long in the tooth to be playing a convent girl - but that was the style, bless them.
The original story was only about 1/3 completed when the production went way over budget and delved into areas that would never be approved by censors. Arguably, given Seena Owen's almost 100% nude (wearing either chiffon negligee, or a strategically held cat) performance, most of it may not have passed censors.
The restoration makes much ado of finding reels from the abandoned "African brothel" sequences, but when all is said and done, the "Swanson Ending" (the only way it was shown after talkies had come in and silents were pretty much a done thing) is a very serviceable and good ending evoking Shakespearian tragedy. Most silents were big on action, short on story, with fairly simple plots. Granted the original was supposed to have a happy, if rather suspicious, happy ending, but this makes total sense, and makes Queen Kelly seem very complete.
The only real loss of the Swanson ending is losing the believably sick (in both senses of the word) performance of Tully Marshall. Between Owen and Marshall, it is a lesson in why the production "code of decency" was developed in the first place. The irony is that, as much as she may have been considered heavy handed or intrusive for firing Von Stoheim, Swanson's ending demonstrates that Swanson really did know what she was doing as a producer. A memorable and informative trip into film history.
If you're not interested in film history or silent film, skip it.
QUEEN KELLY is the story of a convent girl who falls in love with a dissipated prince who is promised to a debauched Queen. By today's standard, Seena Owen's performance as the queen is laughably over the top; she slithers and glowers and when she's really angry, she seems to have something stuck in her eye. Swanson herself was the prototype of today's tiny body, big head build favored in television. In her long shots her build looks almost like a pygmy, especially in comparison to Owen. But Swanson has that riveting face, and remains really a fine actress. The interview sections done as introductions to a television viewing of QUEEN KELLY show her to have retained those gorgeous and expressive eyes. This was considered her last film as a real ingénue - she was a bit long in the tooth to be playing a convent girl - but that was the style, bless them.
The original story was only about 1/3 completed when the production went way over budget and delved into areas that would never be approved by censors. Arguably, given Seena Owen's almost 100% nude (wearing either chiffon negligee, or a strategically held cat) performance, most of it may not have passed censors.
The restoration makes much ado of finding reels from the abandoned "African brothel" sequences, but when all is said and done, the "Swanson Ending" (the only way it was shown after talkies had come in and silents were pretty much a done thing) is a very serviceable and good ending evoking Shakespearian tragedy. Most silents were big on action, short on story, with fairly simple plots. Granted the original was supposed to have a happy, if rather suspicious, happy ending, but this makes total sense, and makes Queen Kelly seem very complete.
The only real loss of the Swanson ending is losing the believably sick (in both senses of the word) performance of Tully Marshall. Between Owen and Marshall, it is a lesson in why the production "code of decency" was developed in the first place. The irony is that, as much as she may have been considered heavy handed or intrusive for firing Von Stoheim, Swanson's ending demonstrates that Swanson really did know what she was doing as a producer. A memorable and informative trip into film history.
If you're not interested in film history or silent film, skip it.
- DAHLRUSSELL
- 29 ene 2007
- Enlace permanente
Argumento
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaA clip from the film appears in El ocaso de una vida (1950), where Norma Desmond (played by Gloria Swanson), a silent movie star who is planning a comeback, watches one of her former films. Erich von Stroheim plays Max Von Mayerling, Desmond's butler, who serves as projectionist for the film clip. It is later revealed that Max was the silent movie director who discovered Norma Desmond. Director Billy Wilder recalled that it was von Stroheim's idea to use the clip from Queen Kelly (1932) in El ocaso de una vida (1950), to add realism.
- ErroresThe positions of the two different groups, the troops and the convent girls, are constantly changing in relation to the shrine on Kambach road.
- Citas
[as Wolfram and Fritz are racing their horses down the street]
Girl 1: Come on, Wild Wolfram! I've bet my nightie on you!
Girl 2: Come on, Fritz! She hasn't GOT a nightie!
- Versiones alternativasDirector Erich von Stroheim never completed the film: the ending is made using stills and subtitles. The European version has a different storyline than the American one.
- ConexionesEdited from Queen Kelly: The Kino Restored International Ending (2011)
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Detalles
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- USD 800,000 (estimado)
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 41 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.33 : 1
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Principales brechas de datos
By what name was Queen Kelly (1929) officially released in India in English?
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