The Queen of Spades |
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The Queen of Spades - 1949 | 95 mins | Drama, Horror | B&WThe Production TeamDirector: Thorold
Dickinson. Producer: Anatole de Grunwald. Script: Rodney Ackland and Arthur Boys. (from the story by Alexander Pushkin) Cinematography: Otto Heller. Editing: Hazel Wilkinson. Art Direction: William Kellner. Costume Design: Oliver Messel. Original Music: Georges Auric. |
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The CastAnton Walbrook
- Capt. Herman Suvorin Edith Evans - Countess Ranevskaya Yvonne Mitchell - Lizaveta Ivanova Ronald Howard - Andrei Mary Jerrold - Old Varvarushka Anthony Dawson - Fyodor Miles Malleson - Tchybukin Michael Medwin - Hovaisky Athene Seyler - Princess Ivashin |
Plot SynopsisA wonderfully macabre supernatural fantasy based on a short story by Alexander Pushkin. Director Thorold Dickinson’s highly atmospheric period piece exudes high production values, elegant costumes and imaginative visuals thanks to the cinematography of Otto Heller. It is 1806 in Imperial Russia, and the city of St. Petersburg is in the grip of gambling fever. As a result many superstitions have arisen, one of them being to do with the evil influence of the titular playing card. A German engineer working in the Russian army, Captain Herman Suvorin (Anton Walbrook), is taunted nightly by his card-playing comrades but can’t afford to join them. He hears of an ancient countess, Ranevskaya (Edith Evans), who is said to have sold her soul to the devil in order to gain the secret to success at Faro – a tale that is confirmed by an ancient book Suvorin stumbles across in a bookstore. Intrigued to learn the secret, the conniving Suvorin seeks out the old countess's household, and feigning a romantic interest, seduces the countess’s lovelorn young companion Lizaveta Ivanova (Yvonne Mitchell). Via Lizaveta he uncovers a secret entrance to the countess’s bedroom by means of a hidden stairway. The captain gains admittance into the house by night, but frightens the abhorrent old countess to death without learning her secret. Believing a chapter in the old book entitled ‘The Dead Shall Give Up Their Secrets’, the now-crazed Suvorin dreams that he is in possession of the secret to Faro, and goes to the gambling den with all his money. He challenges a fellow officer to a hand of Faro with 188,000 roubles as the wager, and is just about to play his winning ace, when before his eyes it changes into a grinning Queen of Spades. |
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