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Queen Christina

United States

1933

99 Min
Black and White
Spanish, English
  • Currently 4.0/5 Stars.
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DIR Rouben Mamoulian

PROD Walter Wanger

SCR H.M. Harwood, Salka Viertel

DP William H. Daniels

CAST Greta Garbo, John Gilbert, Ian Keith, Lewis Stone, Elizabeth Young

ED Blanche Sewell

PROD DES Edgar G. Ulmer

MUSIC Herbert Stothart

Venice (In Competition), Berlinale (Retrospective)

Synopsis

Queen Christina of Sweden is a dominant European ruler in the 17th century, and has never thought of romance. However, she accidentally and secretly falls in love with an emissary from Spain, even though a marriage between the two seems out of the question.

Director

Original

Rouben Mamoulian

With the possible exception of Stanley Kubrick, no director who worked in the Hollywood studio system ever exerted more influence over the entire field of film, and the sensibilities of audiences, than Rouben Mamoulian. With an output of a mere 16 movies across just 30 years, the Russian-born Armenian-descended Mamoulian, working as director and producer much of the time, managed to generate an array of classic films in the musical, dramatic, and action-adventure fields, and was also involved in the planning and all but the final direction of three renowned Hollywood films.

Rouben Mamoulian was born in Tbilisi — which was 60-percent Armenian at the time — in Russian Georgia, in 1897. He attended university in Moscow, studying law, no less, when he decided to join the Second Studio at the Moscow Art Theater, where he studied under Vakhtangov. It was during Mamoulian’s early training as an actor and a director that he learned the importance of rhythm — structural rhythm — in creating… read more

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AKFilmFan

14May13

Beautifully made tragic drama with one powerful standout element: Garbo. Her performance perfectly captures the burden of monarchy and its repression of individuality.

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N. C.

15Jan13

I have been memorizing the room.

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Dave

21Dec12

Perhaps I was expecting something more like The Scarlet Empress, but for some reason I never fully got into this one. Liked large sections of it though, so it is a solid 3/5.

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apexa

15Nov11

This really was a role that Garbo was born to play. Her best talkie by far.

N. C. likes this

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W184

Movie Poster of the Week: “Lady for a Day” and the Posters of 1933

By Adrian Curry on February 16, 2013

A look at the posters for “Hollywood’s Naughtiest, Bawdiest Year.”

read article

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