A sensual European countess arrives at a small American town and quickly provokes moral outrage from the community. During her stay with a cousin, the temptress courts scandal smoking, entic... Read allA sensual European countess arrives at a small American town and quickly provokes moral outrage from the community. During her stay with a cousin, the temptress courts scandal smoking, enticing men, extravagant clothes and a tattoo.A sensual European countess arrives at a small American town and quickly provokes moral outrage from the community. During her stay with a cousin, the temptress courts scandal smoking, enticing men, extravagant clothes and a tattoo.
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- Townsman
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Featured reviews
My favorite scene however was where Chester Conklin, trying to make the Countess feel better about the tattoo on her arm, starts to remove his shirt and show her the long train tattoos on both HIS arms. Pola starts laughing hysterically and you can tell she wasn't acting.
The plot is far-fetched. She is a European Countess who comes to live with her cousin in small town, USA. The local DA (Holmes Herbert) is on a crusade to rid the town of vice and spots a likely suspect in Negri - who is smoking in public! He confronts her and is smitten. The story becomes a battle of wits and he is challenged by a young buck (Charles Emmett Mack) for her affections. The DA is then alternately imperious and abject in her presence as the story progresses, confusing the issue.
'Woman Of The World" is outdated and overacted and prone to melodramatics. Comedy relief is supplied by Chester Conklin as her cousin with whom she is staying. Unless you have never seen Pola Negri this picture is worth missing. The actions of all concerned do not ring true and ultimately is too fanciful and does not cast Ms. Negri in a favorable light. Shown at Cinevent, Columbus, O., 5/13.
I had heard great things about this movie for years so I was excited when this movie was screened at Cinevent in 2013. However, I was utterly bored with Pola Negri. She played the vamp type, but there is nothing alluring or sexy about her. Her round, somewhat plain face and dull personality couldn't become jazzy no matter how much makeup they caked on her face, and believe me, they tried.
As a historical piece, there are worse movies you could see. The story isn't bad and it certainly illustrates what small-town life was like in the 1920s, a far cry from that of the city that most people associate with the flapper era.
True, I would have enjoyed a slightly different conclusion, but it must be admitted that staid old Holmes Herbert (see "Through the Breakers" for a good example of his usual characterization) contributes a far more lively performance here.
I was also not 100% happy with Chester Conklin (in my opinion, a clumsy, mechanical clown with an unlikable personality), but the rest of the players hit the spot both pleasurably and with precision.
I particularly liked young Charles Emmett Mack, a most engaging youth who had quickly advanced through the ranks and finally achieved stardom in his previous film, "Down Upon the Suwannee River". (He was tragically killed in a car accident just 2 years later).
Always beautifully photographed by Bert Glennon and often stylishly directed by Mal St Clair, "A Woman of the World" represents silent cinema at its very best.
Did you know
- GoofsAfter the Countess leaves Italy, a title card introduces us to the American Middle-West. The shot that follows is of a Eucalyptus tree dominating a residential area. While by that time Eucalyptus trees had been imported from Australia into California and were all over that state, they were unknown in the Midwest.
- Quotes
Countess Elnora Natatorini: I am going far away - to the other side of the world - to forget...
Title card: The other side of the world...
Title card: Name any little town in the Middle West - and you're in Maple Valley.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Love Goddesses (1965)
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- Femme du monde
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- Runtime1 hour 10 minutes
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- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1