When actor Herman Brandt harasses neighbor Carola Pointer, she reports him. The Pointers plan to move, but Brandt is found murdered. As suspects in the case, they face Inspector Muller's inv... Read allWhen actor Herman Brandt harasses neighbor Carola Pointer, she reports him. The Pointers plan to move, but Brandt is found murdered. As suspects in the case, they face Inspector Muller's investigation, which reveals hidden complexities.When actor Herman Brandt harasses neighbor Carola Pointer, she reports him. The Pointers plan to move, but Brandt is found murdered. As suspects in the case, they face Inspector Muller's investigation, which reveals hidden complexities.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Nan Grey
- Alice von Attem
- (as Nan Gray)
Oscar Apfel
- Police Desk Sergeant
- (uncredited)
Doris Atkinson
- Autograph Seeker
- (uncredited)
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- Writers
- All cast & crew
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Featured reviews
I had never heard of this movie, and had never seen Verree Teasdale given top billing in a film, so I tuned in for the novelty value.
It turned out to be a very pleasant surprise -- a fast-paced story, imaginatively presented.
The cast is full of faces familiar to any '30s movie fan -- C. Aubrey Smith, Ricardo Cortez (he of the dazzling smile), Anita Louise.
There's even a wire-haired terrier that looks like the dog who played Asta (I don't know the canine actor's name!)
So I recommend this as a little-known but certainly worth-seeing gem, and a great reason for keeping your TCM subscription up to date.
It turned out to be a very pleasant surprise -- a fast-paced story, imaginatively presented.
The cast is full of faces familiar to any '30s movie fan -- C. Aubrey Smith, Ricardo Cortez (he of the dazzling smile), Anita Louise.
There's even a wire-haired terrier that looks like the dog who played Asta (I don't know the canine actor's name!)
So I recommend this as a little-known but certainly worth-seeing gem, and a great reason for keeping your TCM subscription up to date.
In "The Firebird", Ricardo Cortez plays Herman Brandt, a stage actor and complete cad who loves to use women in order to further his fortunes. Again and again, you see him treating these women like dirt...so it's no surprise when eventually he is found dead in his apartment...a murder victim. So, it's up to the local police inspector (C. Aubrey Smith) to determined who did it and why.
This film had a very nice cast. Cortez was good, as always, as a smooth and amoral cad. As for the rest, many are exceptional supporting actors (such as Smith, Anita Louise and Lionel Atwill) and they work together to make a very dandy picture. I especially liked the way the Inspector handled the case.
This film had a very nice cast. Cortez was good, as always, as a smooth and amoral cad. As for the rest, many are exceptional supporting actors (such as Smith, Anita Louise and Lionel Atwill) and they work together to make a very dandy picture. I especially liked the way the Inspector handled the case.
Womanizing matinee idol Ricardo Cortez is murdered in his apartment. Homicide detective C. Aubrey Smith soon limits his suspects to people in the building.
It's not a particularly difficult mystery to solve for the audience, so director William Dieterle fills it in with interesting performances. Lionel Atwill as a retired bureaucrat seems softer and feebler than in any other role; perhaps it is the mustache. Verree Teasdale, as his wife seems about twenty years older than her real-life 30, but she always seemed to play women a bit on the matronly side. Anita Louise, as their daughter, seems small and hesitant. And so forth, with a cast that includes Dorothy Tree, Hobart Cavanaugh, Etienne Giradot, and Skippy. Ernest Haller's photography seems a bit intermittently soft, as if there is some problem with the print, but that might have been a deliberate decision.
It's not a particularly difficult mystery to solve for the audience, so director William Dieterle fills it in with interesting performances. Lionel Atwill as a retired bureaucrat seems softer and feebler than in any other role; perhaps it is the mustache. Verree Teasdale, as his wife seems about twenty years older than her real-life 30, but she always seemed to play women a bit on the matronly side. Anita Louise, as their daughter, seems small and hesitant. And so forth, with a cast that includes Dorothy Tree, Hobart Cavanaugh, Etienne Giradot, and Skippy. Ernest Haller's photography seems a bit intermittently soft, as if there is some problem with the print, but that might have been a deliberate decision.
You can tell that a lot of production money was thrown at THE FIREBIRD but for the life of me I can't tell why it's set in Germany. Ricardo Cortez (the corpse to be) plays a horndog actor with a shady past who lives in a high class apartment building. There's an angry ex-wife, an effeminate personal assistant that's in love with the corpse's Dachsund, and well heeled neighbors with a lovely daughter (Anita Louise) who fear for their reputation. C. Aubrey Smith, the 71-year old impeccable Englishman, plays the police inspector. Remember this is supposed to be set in 1934 Germany (what, no Nazis?). Except for the wiener dog, the apartment manager's pipe, beer swilling policeman and some German shop signs, you'd never know it. Not one stab at an accent between them. A standard whodunnit.
It was not only in more recent times that parents asked themselves what was going on with the younger generation. In pre-War Vienna too -- parents forbade their children from listening to Stravinsky's "Firebird Suite." Anita Louise is the daughter to Verree Teasdale and Lionel Atwill. The story concerns who has been tempted by Ricardo Cortez, the actor living in the apartment below? Someone silences him forever -- they might have done so earlier and spiced up a very slow start. Some twists and turns towards the end can't save this otherwise forgettable social commentary masquerading as a mystery.
Did you know
- TriviaIn 1936, celebrated Russian composer Igor Stravinsky sued Warner Bros. over the 'misuse' of his themes from the ballet "The Firebird." In 1938, a French court awarded him one franc in damages, instead of the 300,000 francs he was claiming.
- ConnectionsReferenced in La puerta abierta (1957)
- SoundtracksThe Firebird Suite
(1919) (uncredited)
Music by Igor Stravinsky
Arranged by Bernhard Kaun
Excerpts played during the opening credits and as background music
Played on a record several times
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 14m(74 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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