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IMDbPro

A Imperatriz Vermelha

Título original: The Scarlet Empress
  • 1934
  • Approved
  • 1 h 44 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,5/10
7,7 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Marlene Dietrich and John Lodge in A Imperatriz Vermelha (1934)
A German noblewoman enters into a loveless marriage with the dim-witted, unstable heir to the Russian throne, then plots to oust him from power.
Reproduzir trailer2:18
1 vídeo
50 fotos
Drama de épocaDramaGuerraHistóriaRomance

Uma nobre alemã entra em um casamento sem amor com o herdeiro estúpido e instável do trono russo, então conspira para tirá-lo do poder.Uma nobre alemã entra em um casamento sem amor com o herdeiro estúpido e instável do trono russo, então conspira para tirá-lo do poder.Uma nobre alemã entra em um casamento sem amor com o herdeiro estúpido e instável do trono russo, então conspira para tirá-lo do poder.

  • Direção
    • Josef von Sternberg
  • Roteiristas
    • Manuel Komroff
    • Eleanor McGeary
  • Artistas
    • Marlene Dietrich
    • John Lodge
    • Sam Jaffe
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    7,5/10
    7,7 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Josef von Sternberg
    • Roteiristas
      • Manuel Komroff
      • Eleanor McGeary
    • Artistas
      • Marlene Dietrich
      • John Lodge
      • Sam Jaffe
    • 68Avaliações de usuários
    • 52Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 1 vitória no total

    Vídeos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:18
    Official Trailer

    Fotos50

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    Elenco principal51

    Editar
    Marlene Dietrich
    Marlene Dietrich
    • Princess Sophia Frederica…
    John Lodge
    John Lodge
    • Count Alexei
    Sam Jaffe
    Sam Jaffe
    • Grand Duke Peter
    Louise Dresser
    Louise Dresser
    • Empress Elizabeth Petrovna
    C. Aubrey Smith
    C. Aubrey Smith
    • Prince August
    Gavin Gordon
    Gavin Gordon
    • Capt. Gregori Orloff
    Olive Tell
    Olive Tell
    • Princess Johanna Elizabeth
    Ruthelma Stevens
    Ruthelma Stevens
    • Countess Elizabeth 'Lizzie'
    Davison Clark
    • Archimandrite Simeon Todorsky…
    Erville Alderson
    Erville Alderson
    • Chancelor Alexei Bestuchef
    Philip Sleeman
    Philip Sleeman
    • Count Lestoq
    • (as Phillip Sleeman)
    Marie Wells
    Marie Wells
    • Marie Tshoglokof
    Hans Heinrich von Twardowski
    Hans Heinrich von Twardowski
    • Ivan Shuvolov
    • (as Hans von Twardowski)
    Gerald Fielding
    • Lt. Dmitri
    Maria Riva
    Maria Riva
    • Sophia as a Child
    • (as Maria)
    Eric Alden
    Eric Alden
    • Lackey #5
    • (não creditado)
    Richard Alexander
    Richard Alexander
    • Count von Breummer
    • (não creditado)
    Nadine Beresford
    • Sophia's Aunt
    • (não creditado)
    • Direção
      • Josef von Sternberg
    • Roteiristas
      • Manuel Komroff
      • Eleanor McGeary
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários68

    7,57.7K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    9planktonrules

    While cold and emotionally distant, it still is an amazing film due to its artistic vision

    This is an absolutely amazing film to watch. I have seen several other collaborations between director Josef Von Sternberg and Marlene Dietrich and I think this is the best--mostly due to it being like a giant painting or tapestry that was almost mesmerizing. The film is a rather odd look at a brief period of the life of Catherine the Great of Russia. It follows her from her betrothal (when she is a Germanic princess) to her ultimately killing her husband and assuming the throne--the space of just a few years).

    During the entire picture, what stood out were the amazing sets. The film begins with some very graphic torture chamber scenes that are definitely "Pre-Code" in that they are so frightening and because of the copious amounts of gratuitous female nudity. While this never could have been allowed once the stronger Production Code was implemented around 1935, it is a captivating and bizarre introduction to the movie and it certainly got your attention!! Then, throughout the film, the sets were magnificent and very twisted--almost like they had been inspired by a combination of LSD, Jean Cocteau's version of BEAUTY AND THE BEAST and the paintings of Hieronymous Bosch! Twisted and grotesque anthropomorphic statues, banisters, candelabras, chairs, etc. grace practically every scene inside the palace--making it look like a combination of Hell and whimsy!! You really just have to see it all to believe it. What was also amazing was how Paramount was able to construct all this without the production bankrupting the company!!! While the dialog and acting is fine, they take a definite backseat to the sets. It's very obvious that Von Sternberg really wasn't trying to humanize the characters or shed too much light on the life of Catherine--it was really more of a work of performance art. And if you accept it as this and NOT an absolutely true recounting of the life of Catherine, then you will be in for a treat.

    As for the historical side of the film, there has long been some disagreement about the coup and subsequent execution of Catherine's husband. While it is almost undoubtedly true she orchestrated it (after all, they made her their leader after Peter's death), what isn't so certain is the character of Peter. Some accounts have described him as half-witted or insane (exactly how he's shown in the film) but others doubt if this was exactly the case--it could have just been propaganda used by Catherine to justify her actions. Plus, when Peter died, some apparently reported this was of natural causes and not murder! Considering everything, though, the film had to portray Peter III some way and the evil half-wit was an enjoyable choice--as Sam Jaffe looked so crazed and made the part come alive with his insane-looking eyes and wonderful delivery! Dietrich herself was also very good (perhaps due to her not being so "artificial-looking" like she was in some of her other films due to excessive makeup), but her performance was definitely overshadowed by the sets and Jaffe

    By the way, I originally gave this film a very respectable score of 8. However, after seeing "The Rise of Catherine the Great" (which was made the exact same year and covered the exact same material), I saw that this Dietrich film was a lot better by comparison. I especially think that Dietrich and Jaffe were a much better Peter and Catherine than Elisabeth Bergner and Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. in the other film.
    mukava991

    Empress Dietrich

    This biopic about the rise of the German Princess Sofia to Empress Catherine of Russia, from naive and deferential innocent to rapacious predator, is accurate only in the broadest outlines. Even the opening credits indicate a loose approach to fact: "Based on a diary of Catherine," "arranged by Manuel Komroff."

    In the first half Marlene Dietrich in the title role overplays breathless awe so emphatically that one can only wonder if she was strictly directed to do so; after her sexual awakening after months of resisting the stirring of her passions by a rakish courtier (John Lodge) and crazed with frustration by her unconsummated marriage to the repellent Tsar-to-be Peter (Sam Jaffe), she melts into the arms of a palace guard during a sudden moonlit encounter.

    It's hard to believe this film passed the 1934 censors, given its open suggestions of out-of-wedlock sex (and subsequent pregnancy); Dietrich's posturings call to mind pre-Code Mae West (who was a friendly acquaintance of Dietrich's on the Paramount lot where they were working at the same time). Perhaps the keepers of the Code were too distracted by the shimmering vision of the blonde icon as lit by Josef von Sternberg. And make no mistake about it, this movie is a paean to Dietrich as a work of art. The "Catherine the Great" plot, scenic design and supporting players are the scaffolding and trappings supporting and surrounding the living goddess.

    These trappings are highly stylized and elaborate as, for example, the Lubitsch-like ritual of Princess Sophia (the future Empress Catherine) kissing the hands of all adults present whenever she enters or exits a room; when she isn't engaged in strictly supervised activities she is kept locked in her bedroom several flights above the main floor of her house; her mother is such a disciplinarian that she scolds the child even when the child obeys. Empress Elizabeth of Russia (Louise Dresser) is introduced on a grand throne in forbidding surroundings decorated with huge grimacing gargoyles festooned with dripping candles and attended by over-dressed lackeys, only to open her mouth and jabber like a bilious small-minded housewife. And the future Tsar Peter whom Sophia is sent to Russia to marry is an imbecile and described as such repeatedly in intertitles in case we miss the point.

    In fact the flow of exaggerations and extremes is more or less constant so that the viewer is alternately hypnotized and amused. If Dietrich is not your cup of tea, the movie will repel you, because it's all about her.
    gazzo-2

    Luminous black and white ode to Marlene...

    ......I saw this years ago, but some of the images-Marlene on a swing, the charging horsemen, the bits w/ Sam Jaffe and C Aubrey Smith, most certainly stand out. It was definitely the director's way of putting his worship of Marlene on display for all to see, Catherine might as well have been Cleopatra or Eleanor of Aquitaine for all the historical accuracy-ha ha-they use.

    This was a movie about excess as much as anything, curtains that go on forever, huge doors, loud music, etc. They just don't make them like this anymore and certainly couldn't afford to then, either.

    I don't think I ever saw Marlene anymore sensual than in this film, and I agree, her idea of playing a 'poor innocent gal'-that isn't put across well at all. Sometimes you just can't fake it, no matter how hard you try.

    *** outta ****, style over everything.
    chaos-rampant

    W is for Wagner

    Historically speaking, the film must count as one of the grossest abominations in a Hollywood which for the longest time envisioned anything laying east and south of the Danube as uncharted, barbarous darkness. Young Catherine arrives in Russia practically a child, only to be greeted by the scoldings of another overbearing mother, an Orthodox patriarch perched beneath an ungodly gargoyle, and a half-mad imbecile for a husband.

    The whole of the Russian court turns out to be not much different from the vile stories of atrocity she was narrated to as a child, one after another a series of machinations at the hands of the half-mad.

    But of course history was never the purpose for Sternberg, these stories at the beginning of the film he visualizes in the manner of pages from a book. So a fiction malformed from history, a book of images, ostensibly based on the diaries of the real person, in turn a history malformed from the real thing, with Dietrich stage center, shining, radiant.

    It was always Dietrich that validated film for Sternberg, the image of seductive beauty that could seduce beauty from the camera. But in several ways, I feel that Sternberg deteriorated upon joining up with her much like the hapless professor in Blue Angel. His art was tortured before, anguished with emotion, but since Dietrich it seemed to be solely consumed by her at the expense of all else.

    Nowhere is this more evident than here, no pretense about it anymore. Dietrich is quite literally queen, destined to be, and the whole thing around her merely provides the tortured circumstances for the scene of triumph.

    There is so much cacophony when she does finally triumph that it makes you think Sternberg has finally gone unhinged from so much pained adoration, that he doesn't quite know when to separate one feverish fantasy from his own. A cavalcade storms inside the palace and up the expansive staircase, a bell rings, ringing bells across the country, crowds rejoice, that were earlier silently praying, and Dietrich is finally ushered on shoulders into the church swarmed with banners on all sides to be crowned empress. Ride of the Valkyries clangs away in bombast for the duration.

    But this is the thing that strikes the most vividly, the crowning luxurious decadence of the whole enterprise. Even in the grip of what seems like lovestruck paroxysm, Sternberg could envision farther than most at the time. And when he failed, he failed more spectacularly than anyone could, in the most interesting ways to see.

    It baffles. It exhilarates with the sheer monstrosity of the caricature. It overwhelms any sensibility that is fine, any sense of good taste. You will never see more a outrageous depiction of an Orthodox church ever, the frescoes of saints bordering on a surreal that is blasphemous. Or more styrofoam gargoyles in one studio lot palace.

    So the frame is overflowing with anguished, fiendish luxury; but everything that is grossly portrayed here, was actually taking place on that studio lot. Whatever was going on in 18th century Russia, at least this thing was actually happening in Hollywood, that would go to such lengths to envision and stage such a dazzling darkness. A cavalcade was made to storm up a staircase. And there was this woman at the center, flickering before the camera like the flame of the candle she holds at one scene, finally lighting up the place.

    So it is apt to recast the whole thing as Dietrich's journey, mirrored from the other, from her faraway home into the court of a foreign country, with every spotlight on her, every male pair of eyes.

    The first part is sourced out as a kind of Alice in Wonderland; the girl enters a strange world, apprehensive, fearful, a world that would reduce her to size, where she must fit through doors too big, wait for the queen or lose her head, finally descend into a rabbit hole and come out the other end the mother of a heir.

    But in the second part she becomes the Dietrich we know and have come to see conquer with fierce beauty, the Lola that first broke hearts in Blue Angel; the whole film around her transforms into the restless dream that men were dreaming about her. The idea is that she becomes that dream, operating the image from inside.

    It is not a good film all else considered, the overcooked bombast, the intertitles that never shy away from revealing the full implications of the most obvious detail, but it's a mess you should see, just for how madly passionate.
    10waxwingslain77

    Unforgettable! What a visual feast!

    I am a hypocrite; I only like movies which have great dialogue. My hypocritical exception is "The Scarlet Empress." You won't find great dialogue here, but don't fret; to ME, the dialogue is insignificant. This one must be SEEN to be appreciated.

    Director Josef Van Sternberg, dubbed (correctly) "A lyricist of light and shadow" by one critic, proves this point in "Scarlet Empress" more than in any other of his films. Sternberg also knew he was losing Dietrich, and I like one scene where an actor is made up (from a side view) to resemble Sternberg. This actor is essentially the only one Marlene refuses her bed to, despite having no qualms about bedroom antics with half the Russian court. Sternberg projected himself into the role of Count Alexi, a character who has more screen time than anyone other than Dietrich. Alexi is teased by Dietrich and in the end he, um "doesn't get the girl." Sternberg knew he was no longer getting Dietrich and put this knowledge on celluloid with an awe-inspiring, even malicious fire. There are two things in this film which I really LOVE. The grotesque replicas which saturate the film are of course indicative of how the film will play out. The replicas, I suspect, were not easy or inexpensive to make--which makes them all the more fascinating, horrifying and MESMERIZING!

    The background score. I have never seen a drama from the 1930s which used music more brilliantly than "Scarlet Empress." In a scene in a stable, when there is a chance that the two principals may make love, they are interrupted by the braying of a horse, which had been out of sight of the two. (According to many historians, this scene has much, MUCH deeper significance than it seems.) I cannot write what the historians have told to me on this board. It would be inappropriate. But before the horse neighs in that scene, Dietrich is twirling from a rope, and the music in the background lends immense eroticism to the scene, as does a straw which keeps going into and out of Marlene's mouth. The music combined with the beautiful lighting is stunning! There is also an opening torture scene which features a man swinging to and fro inside a huge bell, his head causing the bell to peal. Then, a quick dissolve to an innocent young lady who is flying high on her swing. THAT is a feat of genius!

    If you can ignore some historical inaccuracies, which I suggest you do, and allow yourself to gorge on the beautiful lighting, music, as well as most scenes, I dare you to tell me that the film didn't MESMERIZE you! A TEN!

    This pre-Production code film is a treasure throughout

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    Enredo

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    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Marlene Dietrich's own daughter Maria Riva portrayed young Sophia at the beginning of the film and it was her debut in movies.
    • Erros de gravação
      Most of the action takes place at The Kremlin in Moscow. The historical Empress Elizabeth, Grand Duke Peter and later Catherine spent most of their reigns in St. Petersburg, which during the 18th Century was a modern, Europeanized city.
    • Citações

      Grand Duke Peter: Why are those bells ringing?

      [He opens the bedroom door and addresses a man in the hall]

      Grand Duke Peter: Why are those bells ringing?

      Capt. Gregori Orloff: I don't know, Peter.

      Grand Duke Peter: How dare you address me like that! Who are you?

      Capt. Gregori Orloff: My name is Orloff, and I'm on duty as guard.

      Grand Duke Peter: I'll have your head for this insolence! You're addressing the emperor!

      Capt. Gregori Orloff: There is no emperor. There is only an empress.

    • Conexões
      Edited from Alta Traição (1928)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Symphony No.4 in F Minor, Op.36
      Written by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky

      Excerpts played during the opening credits and incorporated into the score often

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    Perguntas frequentes19

    • How long is The Scarlet Empress?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 7 de setembro de 1934 (Estados Unidos da América)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • A Imperatriz Galante
    • Locações de filme
      • Paramount Studios - 5555 Melrose Avenue, Hollywood, Los Angeles, Califórnia, EUA(Studio)
    • Empresa de produção
      • Paramount Pictures
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Orçamento
      • US$ 900.000 (estimativa)
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 3.353
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 44 min(104 min)
    • Cor
      • Black and White
    • Proporção
      • 1.37 : 1

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