|
The
Scarlet Empress (1934)
In Josef von Sternberg's startling, dark, daring, visually
opulent, hauntingly expressionistic, and mostly fictional, unorthodox
biopic of Prussian-born Princess Sophia Frederica - a semi-erotic
tale of 18th century Russia; it marked the sixth (of seven) film
collaborations between Sternberg and Dietrich:
- in the opening montage, young
Sophia Frederica (Maria Sieber/Riva, Marlene Dietrich's own daughter)
was told a bedtime story about the sado-masochistic,
depraved tortures and brutalities in Tsarist Russia, including
views of a woman strapped to a revolving wheel, multiple axe-executions
and beheadings, a group of bound topless women burned at the stake,
and an upside-down male torture victim used as a giant bell-clapper
- the young, naive, tremulous
bride-to-be Princess Sophia Frederica (Marlene Dietrich)
was brought on a seven-week journey to Russia for an arranged marriage
to Grand Duke Peter III (Sam Jaffe in his film debut), nephew of
the unpleasant, domineering Empress Elizabeth Petrovna (Louise
Dresser); the Empress hoped to improve the royal blood line by
having Frederica marry her no-good nephew ("...pushed like
a brood mare into the preparations for her marriage to a royal half-wit")
- during the journey at a roadside waystation where
they planned to spend the night, the handsome
lead Russian emissary from Moscow, Count Alexei (John Lodge) complimented
Sophia's beauty ("Your hand is beautiful, isn't it?")
and he affectionately and boldly stole a kiss from her, and explained
himself: "Because I've fallen in love with you"
|
|
The Count's Flirtations with Count Alexei
at Waystation
|
- once the Princess arrived in Moscow, Russia, the awed,
wide-mouthed 15 year old Sophia looked in shock-amazement at everything:
the gothic imagery of giant, ghoulish gargoyle-like statues each
holding a candle, various religious icons, and the 20-foot-high,
oversized carved wooden doors (requiring many women to open); she
formally met the Empress, who immediately
pronounced a new name for Sophia: "Sophia Frederica. Hardly
a name for a future Empress....You will be called Catherine Alexina,
a good Russian name"
- in particular, she was revulsed by her first meeting
with the Grand Duke Peter - a bumbling, idiotic, grinning, and childlike
husband-to-be in an arranged marriage, who blurted out: "I want
to play with my toys!"
- during her bravura marriage ceremony sequence,
the veil-covered, stone-faced Catherine looked trapped
and overwhelmed amidst bearded Orthodox priests with crucifixes and
waving incense - everyone holding candles, including Sophia with
one flickering close to her face
|
|
The Bravura Marriage Ceremony Between
Grand Duke Peter III (Sam Jaffe) and Princess Sophia Frederica
(Marlene Dietrich)
|
- the character of Russia's new queen
changed as she became involved in many romantic flirtations with
men in her entourage, mostly with Russian emissary Count Alexei,
an opportunistic womanizer, and Captain Orloff (Gavin Gordon)
- Catherine met clandestinely with Count Alexei
in the stable barn for her first amorous encounter, where she seductively
kept replacing a piece of straw between her lips and warned: "If
you come closer, I'll scream"; he removed every strand and then
coyly answered: "It is easier for you to scream without a straw in your mouth," before
kissing her; she was startled by the whinnying of a horse mid-kiss and ran off
- she was shocked watching a giant drill
bit penetrating and emerging from the eye of a mural wall painting
- Peter had drilled a hole in the wall to spy on his Aunt's bedroom
- in the film's most startling moment, Catherine learned
the identity of the male who had been regularly bedding
down the Empress; she caught a brief glimpse of a robed and
hatted figure who climbed the stairs behind her and entered the Empress'
bedroom - to her shock, it was the uniformed military figure of Count
Alexei; insanely jealous and angered over Count Alexei's love of the old Empress Elizabeth,
Catherine stomped on Count Alexei's portrait-locket and then threw it out of the window.
It fell almost endlessly to the ground in stages, as it slowly descended and was momentarily
caught by various tree branches, until it dropped into a snowdrift
|
|
|
Catherine's Shocking Discovery That Count Alexei was
the Empress' Lover
|
- having second thoughts, she decided to retrieve the
locket-portrait and went outside her quarters; in a further scene
of adulterous seduction, she was caught and detained by an anonymous
palace guard, Lt. Dmitri (Gerald Fielding) on his first night of
duty, who was astonished to learn who she was: ("If
you are the Grand Duchess, then I am the Grand Duke...On a night
like this, anything might happen - if I'm fortunate").
She mentioned that he was "fortunate, very fortunate" and
clasped her hands behind him (with extended fingers) as she embraced
and surrendered to him - before a fade to black
|
|
Catherine's Seduction of a Palace Guard: Lieutenant
Dmitri
|
- after the birth of a child (of questionable fatherhood),
Catherine heard rumors that the Grand Duke had plans to remove her
from power and execute her once the Empress passed away; he was also
hinting that he would marry his black-haired, feral-looking mistress
Countess Elizabeth 'Lizzie' Varonsoff (Ruthelma Stevens); soon after
in 1762, the Empress died; Catherine realized
the gravity of the new political situation once Peter assumed power
and gloated over the open coffin of the Empress
- fur-hatted Catherine
had other plans ("Catherine coolly added the army to her list of conquests");
she was slowly transformed into a sexually-depraved dominatrix ruler
with a whip; she appraised her troops, including swaggering, flirtatious
assertions to Captain Orloff; she also singled out Lieutenant
Dmitri - one of her attractive, virile soldiers: "Now there's
another good-looking soldier....And your duties, Dmitri?...It must
be cold at night, sometimes?...Anyway, I'm certain you're very efficient,
Lieutenant"; she presented
him with a medal and pinned it on his chest: "For bravery in
action. See that you do justice to it in future emergencies" -
he was most likely the one who had borne her a child!
- she also appeared that evening in the Empress' old
bedroom, with a gauzy veil over herself before allowing the desperate
Count Alexei to vow his love for her: ("Catherine, I love you,
worship you"); when he leaned down to kiss her behind the veil, she gripped the
veil with her fist and drew it aside to reveal their affectionate
kiss, and then asked for a favor from the scorned Count - to open
her secret door to allow entrance for a more-preferred military
figure - Captain Orloff
- as predicted, after the death of the Empress, Peter
put Catherine under house arrest: ("My wife is not to leave
the palace. She's under arrest until further orders. Am I the Emperor
of Russia, or am I not?"); to consolidate his power, Peter planned
to eliminate her
- in the bell-ringing conclusion, Catherine (in the
white uniform of a male Cossack) had engineered a coup d'etat with
the military and Orloff, to coordinate the downfall and assassination
of Peter III; Catherine escaped through her bedroom's secret passageway
with the aid of Captain Orloff and other soldiers; they mounted horses
in a cavalry batallion led by Count Alexei; with the support of the
military behind her, Count Alexei proudly and succinctly affirmed the
transfer of power: "Exit Peter III. Enter
Catherine II"; they proceeded to a military encampment to prepare for
the toppling of Russian Emperor Peter III in the palace
- the cavalry soldiers (with Catherine
in the lead) noisily rode their horses back to the palace; they galloped
up the grand staircase into the interior of the palace, and assembled
in the throne room where she
was crowned as Catherine the Great, Tsarina of Russia
- the film's last lines were delivered by Count Orloff to Emperor Peter who had
been dethroned: "There is no emperor. There is
only an empress"; she victoriously ascended the throne with her white
stallion horse to take her rightful
place before her royal forces after her seizure of power
|
Naked Women Burned at the Stake
A Human Bell Clapper
In Moscow, The Princess Was Greeted by the Empress (Louise
Dresser)
The Princess's First Meeting with the Imbecilic Grand
Duke Peter
15 Year Old Sophia Overwhelmed and Surrounded by Giant
Gargoyle Statues
With Womanizing Count Alexei in the Stable Barn
Peter's Spying on the Empress' Bedroom Through a Mural
Painting
Count Alexei's Portrait-Locket Before It Was Stomped On by a Jealous
Catherine
The Portrait-Locket Thrown Out the Window and Descending Down Tree Branches
Catherine's Swaggering Flirtations with Her Troops
Veiled Catherine Taunting Count Alexei With Her Love
The Toppling of Emperor Peter, and the Crowning of Catherine
as Tsarina of Russia
|