Stamboul (film)
Stamboul is a 1932 British drama film directed by Dimitri Buchowetzki and starring Warwick Ward, Rosita Moreno, Margot Grahame, and Garry Marsh. It was released by the British division of Paramount Pictures. The film's sets were designed by the art director Heinrich Richter, Hermann Warm and R. Holmes Paul.
Stamboul | |
---|---|
Directed by | Dimitri Buchowetzki |
Produced by | Walter Morosco |
Written by | Claude Farrère (novel) Pierre Frondaie (play) Heinz Goldberg Harry Kahn Henry Koster Reginald Denham |
Starring | Warwick Ward Rosita Moreno Margot Grahame |
Music by | Percival Mackey |
Production company | Paramount British Pictures |
Distributed by | Paramount British Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 75 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Buchowetski also co-directed El hombre que asesino with Fernando Gomis, the Spanish-language version of the film, also released by Paramount.[1]
The film is based on the novel L'homme qui assasina (1906) by Claude Farrère and on a play by Pierre Frondaie.
Premise
In the lead-up to the First World War, a French military attaché falls in love with the wife of a prominent German in Stamboul in the Ottoman Empire.
Cast
- Warwick Ward as Col André de Sevigne
- Rosita Moreno as Baroness von Strick
- Margot Grahame as Countess Elsa Talven
- Henry Hewitt as Baron von Strick
- Garry Marsh as Prince Cernuwitz
- Alan Napier as Bouchier
- Abraham Sofaer as Mahmed Pasha
- Stella Arbenina as Mme. Bouchier
- Annie Esmond as Nurse
- Eric Pavitt as Franz
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See also
- The Right to Love (1920)
- The Man Who Murdered (1931)
References
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