The Rise of Catherine the Great
The Rise of Catherine the Great | |
---|---|
Directed by | Paul Czinner |
Written by | Lajos Bíró Arthur Wimperis Melchior Lengyel |
Produced by | Alexander Korda Ludovico Toeplitz (uncredited) |
Starring | Elisabeth Bergner Douglas Fairbanks Jr. Flora Robson |
Narrated by | Alexander Kerensky |
Cinematography | Georges Périnal |
Edited by | Stephen Harrison Harold Young |
Music by | Ernst Toch (uncredited) Irving Berlin |
Production company | |
Distributed by | United Artists |
Release date |
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Running time | 94 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Budget | $550,000[1] |
The Rise of Catherine the Great (also titled Catherine the Great) is a 1934 British historical film about the rise to power of Catherine the Great. It was directed by Paul Czinner, and stars Elisabeth Bergner as Catherine, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., as Grand Duke Peter, Dorothy Hale as Countess Olga, and Flora Robson as Empress Elizabeth.
The movie was banned in Germany. On 14 March 1934 this matter invoked a question in the British Parliament (House of Commons): "Is it to be understood that no British film in which there is a Jewish actor or actress will be permitted to be shown in Germany in future?".[2]
Plot
[edit]This historical drama recounts the events that led to the accession of Catherine the Great, Empress of all the Russias. The film opens with the arrival in 1744 of Princess Sophie Auguste Frederika – whose name would be changed to ‘Catherine’ – from her father's court of Anhalt-Zerbst (in modern Germany) to the court of the Empress Elizabeth. "Little Catherine" is to marry the Grand Duke Peter, nephew and heir presumptive of the unmarried and childless Empress Elizabeth.
Peter already displays signs of mental instability and a sharply misogynist streak. He rejects Catherine on their wedding night, reacting to something innocently said by his French valet, claiming that she used feminine tricks to win him over. In time, though, Peter accepts her and they have a happy marriage for a while. Meanwhile, Catherine gains important experience of government from working as principal aide to the empress.
The empress dies and Peter becomes tsar, but his mental illness is starting to get the better of him, along with sheer boredom in the job. Catherine still loves him despite beginning a very public love affair with one of her best friends – until one night when Peter goes one step too far in publicly humiliating his wife. She ceases to love him, which enables her to be clear-headed in supporting a planned coup d'état. The following morning, he is arrested and Catherine is made Empress of All the Russias.
The elevation is marred by Peter's murder that very morning, contrary to Catherine's command. Grigory Orlov explains that everything has a price, and the crown has the highest price of all. The film ends, with Catherine in tears on her throne, while the cheers of the crowds are heard outside.
Cast
[edit]- Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., as Grand Duke Peter
- Elisabeth Bergner as Catherine
- Flora Robson as Empress Elisabeth
- Gerald du Maurier as Lecocq
- Irene Vanbrugh as Princess Anhalt-Zerbst
- Joan Gardner as Katushienka
- Dorothy Hale as Countess Olga
- Diana Napier as Countess Vorontzova
- Griffith Jones as Grigory Orlov
- Gibb McLaughlin as Bestujhev
- Clifford Heatherley as Ogarev
- Laurence Hanray as Goudovitch
- Allan Jeayes as Col. Karnilov
Reception
[edit]Variety's original 1933 review summed up the film as having numerous sequences with outstanding "direction, portrayal and dialog," particularly crediting performances by Fairbanks (whose performance they described as one of the best of his career) and Robson, while noting that Bergner was "altogether believable" as the young Catherine.[3]
New York Times reviewer Dave Kehr described the film as "a handsome but conventional melodrama," but inferior to the contemporaneous rival Catherine biopic The Scarlet Empress (1934) by Josef von Sternberg.[4]
The Guardian's historical films reviewer Alex von Tunzelmann credits the film with both entertainment value (grade: B−) and substantial historical depth and accuracy (grade: B−).[5]
References
[edit]- ^ "Good Pix Can't Be Made Cheaply". Variety. 12 June 1934. p. 21.
- ^ Germany (British Film): Volume 287: debated on Wednesday 14 March 1934, retrieved April 26, 2020
- ^ "The Rise of Catherine the Great", December 31, 1933, Variety retrieved February 20, 2020
- ^ Dave Kehr, "Alexander Korda’s Historical Films Hold a Fun House Mirror Up to the Present," May 6, 2009, New York Times, retrieved February 20, 2020
- ^ von Tunzelmann, Alex "The Rise of Catherine the Great: not too much horseplay; Flora Robson and Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. help make this broadly accurate biopic of the Russian empress wickedly enjoyable," July 24, 2014, The Guardian, retrieved February 20, 2020
External links
[edit]- The Rise of Catherine the Great at IMDb
- The Rise of Catherine the Great at the TCM Movie Database
- The Rise of Catherine the Great at AllMovie
- The Rise of Catherine the Great view film online at YouTube.com
- The Rise of Catherine the Great is available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive
- 1934 films
- 1934 drama films
- 1930s historical films
- Films set in Saint Petersburg
- Films set in 1744
- Films set in the 1750s
- Films set in the 1760s
- British historical films
- British biographical films
- British drama films
- British black-and-white films
- 1930s English-language films
- British films based on plays
- Films directed by Paul Czinner
- Films about Catherine the Great
- Films scored by Ernst Toch
- Films produced by Alexander Korda
- Cultural depictions of Peter III of Russia
- Films shot at Imperial Studios, Elstree
- 1930s British films
- English-language historical films