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Synopsis

In Russia, in 1919, Count Alexander Volsky (Edward Everett Horton) goes to the office of the Kharkov Times, a publishing house, to offer his old friend Anton Kalenin, the paper’s editor, a manuscript. The count has been undergoing financial hardship ever since the Soviets confiscated his estate and hopes to sell the manuscript to get food and drink. Upon learning that Anton has unexpectedly died and his only daughter Nadina (Anna Lee) has taken over the paper, Volsky hands her the manuscript and explains that it’s an autobiography written by Fedja Michailovitch Petroff (George Sanders)—Nadina’s former fiancé (she broke the engagement after catching him intimately kissing a peasant bride the day of her wedding). After Volsky confides that Fedja is unaware that he has taken the manuscript, he admits that he is unable to read the document because his glasses were destroyed during the revolution and he doesn’t have the means to replace them. Taking pity on the fallen former count, Nadina gives Volsky twenty rubles and promises to read it.

After Volsky departs, Nadina begins reading Fedja’s memoir. It’s set seven years earlier, in 1912, in a summer resort near Kharkov, where the publishing family spend their summer holiday. It tells of Olga (Linda Darnell), an illiterate, scheming, and alluring peasant siren, the daughter of the woodcutter, who is interested in moving up in the world and doesn’t care how she does it. Olga lures the middle-aged peasant farmer Urbenin (Hugo Haas), the overseer to the count’s estate, to marry her, as she enters the loveless marriage to get away from her strict father. The hot-blooded Olga entertains a few affairs that drive Urbenin crazy, but he choses to ignore them because he loves his wife. One of her affairs is with the dashing local judge Fedor Michailovitch Petroff who is engaged to Nadina, the daughter of the publisher. Olga also courts the decadent aristocrat, Count Volsky, a doddering old fool who plies her with rich gifts, and she plans on dumping her hubby to marry the fool for his money. —Ozu’s World of Movie Reviews

Director

Original

Douglas Sirk

The film director Douglas Sirk, whose reputation blossomed in the generation after his 1959 retirement from Hollywood filmmaking, was born Hans Detlef Sierck on April 26, 1900, in Hamburg, Germany to a journalist. Both of his parents were Danish, and the future director would make movies in German, Danish and English. His reputation, which was breathed to life by the French nouvelle vague critiques who developed the “auteur” (author) theory of film criticism, casts him one of the cinema’s great ironists. In his American and European films, his characters perceive their lives quite differently than does the movie audience viewing “them” in a theater. Dealing with love, death and societal constraints, his films often depend on melodrama, particularly the high suds soap operas he lensed for producer Ross Hunter in the 1950s: Magnificent Obsession (1954), All That Heaven Allows (1955), and his last American film, Imitation of Life (1959). (Sirk’s favorite American film was the Western… read more

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