Savoy Hotel 217

Savoy Hotel 217 (German: Savoy-Hotel 217) is a 1936 German drama film directed by Gustav Ucicky and starring Hans Albers, Brigitte Horney and Alexander Engel.[1]

Savoy Hotel 217
Directed byGustav Ucicky
Produced byFritz Podehl
Written byGerhard Menzel
StarringHans Albers
Brigitte Horney
Alexander Engel
Music byWalter Gronostay
CinematographyFritz Arno Wagner
Edited byEduard von Borsody
Production
company
UFA
Distributed byUFA
Release date
7 April 1936
Running time
92 minutes
CountryGermany
LanguageGerman

The film's sets were designed by the art directors Robert Herlth and Walter Röhrig. The costumes were by Herbert Ploberger.

Cast

  • Hans Albers as Andrei Antonovitch Wolodkin
  • Brigitte Horney as Nastasja Andrejevna Daschenko
  • Alexander Engel as Fedor Fedorovich Daschenko
  • René Deltgen as Sergei Gavrilovitch Schuvalov
  • Gusti Huber as Darja Sergejewna Plagina
  • Käthe Dorsch as Anna Fedorovna Orlowa
  • Jakob Tiedtke as Leonid Alexandrovitch Schapkin
  • Aribert Wäscher as Pavel Pavlovitch
  • Hans Leibelt as Untersuchungsrichter
  • Paul Westermeier as Schlittenkutscher
  • Carl Auen as Kriminalbeamter
  • Fritz Berghof as Aribor
  • Hellmuth Bergmann as Wachmann
  • Paul Bildt as Bettler
  • Horst Birr as Wanja - Hotelangestellter
  • Günther Brackmann as Page
  • Walter Brückner as Zuschauer im Varieté
  • Viktor Carter as Junger Uniformierter
  • Jac Diehl as Zuschauer im Varieté
  • Michael Distler as Russe
  • Erich Dunskus as Aufseher
  • Max Harry Ernst as Hotelangestellter
  • Karl Etlinger as Igor Andrej - Tubaspieler
  • Erich Fiedler as Etagenkellner
  • Paul Ludwig Frey as Untersuchungsrichter
  • Lothar Glathe as Zuschauer im Varieté
  • Ralph-Willy Grunert as Hotelangestellter
  • Albert Hugelmann as Insasse im Nachtasyl
  • Margot Höpfner as Tänzerin
  • Herbert Hübner as Julio Simkowitsch - Personalchef
  • Carl Iban as Insasse im Nachtasyl
  • Babette Jenssen as Zimmermädchen
  • Josef Karma as Insasse im Nachtasyl
  • Jens Keith as Tänzer
  • Harald Maresch
  • Hans Meyer-Hanno as Insasse im Nachtasyl
  • Werner Pledath as Michael Trofinawitsch - Etagenkellner
  • Tine Schneider as Zuschauerin im Varieté
  • S.O. Schoening as Russischer Budenbesitzer
  • Rudolf Schündler as Geschäftsführer des 'Savoy'
  • Friedrich Teitge as Drehorgelspieler
  • Tommy Thomas as Hotelpage
  • Walter von Allwoerden as Schreiber des Untersuchungsrichters
  • Else Ward as Russin bei Osterfeierlichkeit
  • Raimund Warta as Hotelangestellter
  • Eduard Wenck as Iwan Iwanowitsch - Hotelportier
  • Ewald Wenck as Schlittenkutscher

Reception

Writing for The Spectator in 1936, Graham Greene gave the film a positive review, characterizing it as an "agreeably [...] slow, good-humoured murder-story". Praising Engel's acting as particularly vivid, Greene summarized the film, claiming: "melodramatic passions are given a pleasantly realistic setting by a very competent director and a first-class cameraman".[2]

gollark: Entirely words. I almost entirely lack mental picturey capability.
gollark: Which is a sort of dark græy.
gollark: It was designed for Discord dark mode.
gollark: Yes, that's kind of a design flaw.
gollark: Although it is cool that your glasses create halos.

References

  1. Bock & Bergfelder p.217
  2. Greene, Graham (9 October 1036). "The Texas Rangers/Savoy Hotel 217/The King Steps Out". The Spectator. (reprinted in: Taylor, John Russell, ed. (1980). The Pleasure Dome. pp. 107-108. ISBN 0192812866.)

Bibliography

  • Bock, Hans-Michael & Bergfelder, Tim. The Concise CineGraph. Encyclopedia of German Cinema. Berghahn Books, 2009.


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