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IMDbPro

She

  • 1935
  • Approved
  • 1h 41m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
2.1K
YOUR RATING
She (1935)
Home Video Trailer from Kino International
Play trailer1:25
1 Video
24 Photos
QuestSupernatural FantasyAdventureFantasyRomanceSci-Fi

A group of explorers search for the legendary "flame of life", a mysterious force that bestows immortality.A group of explorers search for the legendary "flame of life", a mysterious force that bestows immortality.A group of explorers search for the legendary "flame of life", a mysterious force that bestows immortality.

  • Directors
    • Lansing C. Holden
    • Irving Pichel
  • Writers
    • Ruth Rose
    • Dudley Nichols
    • H. Rider Haggard
  • Stars
    • Helen Gahagan
    • Randolph Scott
    • Helen Mack
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    2.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Lansing C. Holden
      • Irving Pichel
    • Writers
      • Ruth Rose
      • Dudley Nichols
      • H. Rider Haggard
    • Stars
      • Helen Gahagan
      • Randolph Scott
      • Helen Mack
    • 57User reviews
    • 38Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 1 win & 3 nominations total

    Videos1

    She
    Trailer 1:25
    She

    Photos24

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    Top cast15

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    Helen Gahagan
    Helen Gahagan
    • She
    Randolph Scott
    Randolph Scott
    • Leo Vincey
    Helen Mack
    Helen Mack
    • Tanya Dugmore
    Nigel Bruce
    Nigel Bruce
    • Horace Holly
    Julius Adler
    • High Priest
    • (uncredited)
    Ray Corrigan
    Ray Corrigan
    • Guard
    • (uncredited)
    Jerry Frank
    • Guard
    • (uncredited)
    Arnold Gray
    Arnold Gray
    • Priest
    • (uncredited)
    Lumsden Hare
    Lumsden Hare
    • Dugmore
    • (uncredited)
    Samuel S. Hinds
    Samuel S. Hinds
    • John Vincey
    • (uncredited)
    Noble Johnson
    Noble Johnson
    • Amahaggar Chief
    • (uncredited)
    Eli Mintz
    Eli Mintz
      Jim Thorpe
      Jim Thorpe
      • Captain of the Guard
      • (uncredited)
      Gustav von Seyffertitz
      Gustav von Seyffertitz
      • Billali
      • (uncredited)
      Bill Wolfe
      • Priest
      • (uncredited)
      • Directors
        • Lansing C. Holden
        • Irving Pichel
      • Writers
        • Ruth Rose
        • Dudley Nichols
        • H. Rider Haggard
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews57

      6.42.1K
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      Featured reviews

      7utgard14

      "...and still you do not understand."

      Leo Vincey (Randolph Scott) and Horace Holly (Nigel Bruce) search the Arctic for a hidden land where a mystical blue flame is kept. Along the way they pick up lovely and innocent Tanya (Helen Mack), who falls in love with handsome Leo. Eventually they arrive at the place they were seeking and discover it ruled by a merciless and immortal woman (Helen Gahagan) known as "She who must be obeyed." She believes Leo to be her long-lost love returned to her at last and She is none too pleased with cutie Tanya's affections towards her man.

      Fun lost world escapist fare made at a time when there were still unexplored regions of the world and imaginations ran wild at the thought of discovering lost civilizations or hidden treasures. We still get movies like this every once in awhile today, particularly about lost treasure. But back then it was a common staple of fiction, print and film. There was a sense of wonder and excitement about exploring the unknown. Not to get on my soapbox but this type of storytelling does seem to be lost to us in the cynical age we live in today.

      Future Congresswoman Helen Gahagan (she coined Nixon's nickname "Tricky Dick") gives a melodramatically memorable performance as She. Randolph Scott, years away from his western stardom, is very good as the heroic leading man. I especially liked that he was tempted at the prospect of immortality. It makes him seem a little more human than this type of character often was allowed to be back then. Helen Mack is pretty but can't say the name Leo to save her life. She keeps pronouncing it as Lay-o throughout the movie. Still, she's better here than she was in Son of Kong. Nigel Bruce is solid as ever. Samuel S. Hinds has a brief but good part at the beginning as Leo Vincey's dying uncle.

      Striking sets, costumes, and special effects. Adapted from H. Rider Haggard's novel, "She" was produced by King Kong's Merian C. Cooper, written by Ruth Rose, and scored by Max Steiner. So, in a way, it's like a cousin to that great film. "She" has been released in colorized form. While I am NOT a fan of colorizing black & white films at all, I will say that the colorization for this particular film is probably the best I've ever seen. It resembles the kind of color that would have been available at the time and not the more lavish Technicolor from years later, so the muted colors that usually come with the colorization process seems to work in its favor. But still, I prefer the original black & white film and would recommend it more.
      Gothick

      Reigning through Terror is So Much More Fun!

      I have very happy memories of this movie, which I finally saw in a revival house in New York City in the early Nineties, after many years of its unavailability due to the Hammer remake. This much more idiosyncratic version from the Thirties owes a lot of its atmosphere and stylish elan to the extraordinary Bauhaus-inspired sets, the Max Steiner score, and Helen Gahagan's majestically mannered performance as She Who MUST Be Obeyed. It's a film very much of its time yet there is also a timeless, haunting quality to certain sequences. It has very little to do with Rider Haggard's novel (which is a great favorite of mine) but once I realized this was going to be a different story altogether I didn't care.

      The theatre that showed this was packed for a mid afternoon screening, and the audience reacted with tremendous enthusiasm to this classic film. If you have a taste for such great 1930s epics as King Kong, Gunga Din, and King Solomon's Mines, you will enjoy it as well. The 1965 version with Ursula Andress, Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee is fun as well but has even less to do with the themes of Haggard's original novel. It does however have a more up to date feel for those who care about glossy production values.
      7gftbiloxi

      Highly Influential, Largely Forgotten--And Lots of Fun

      If the 1935 SHE reminds you vaguely of the 1933 KING KONG do not be too surprised: both films were produced by Meriam C. Cooper, who endowed them with similar visual styles--and who tweaked the 1887 novel by H. Rider Haggard to create a similar story line as well. Starring Broadway actress (and later two term Democratic congresswoman from California) Helen Gahagan in her only film role as The Eternal One, SHE did not, however, meet with the same financial success. It lost a tremendous amount of money for RKO, was withdrawn, and for many years was thought to be completely lost.

      Although the film alters the Haggard novel in a great many ways, it retains the basic elements. Lured by a family legend, Leo Vincey (Randolph Scott) braves the frozen European north with family friend Horace Holly (Nigel Bruce, best known for his appearances in the Sherlock Holmes series) and innocent Tanya Dugmore (Helen Mack, popular 1930s ingenue.) When an avalanche exposes a cavern, the three find that the Vincey family legend is not quite so fanciful after all.

      Most particularly, they find themselves at the mercy of She Who Must Be Obeyed, a woman who recalls talk of Jesus Christ in the Jerusalem market place, a woman two thousand years old who preserves her life by bathing in a radioactive flame that vents from the volcanic floor of her hidden kingdom. She (known here as Queen Hash-A-Mo-Tep) has been waiting for the reincarnation of her long-dead love, and Leo is his spitting image.

      The acting styles are stiff even by 1935 standards and although Miss Gahagan is attractive in a 1930s way she lacks the stunning beauty attributed to She by the Haggard novel--but the great draw of the film was never intended to be great acting: like KING KONG, it is an action-adventure film with knockout sets (a few of them actually lifted from KING KONG), memorable special effects, and remarkable cinematographic set pieces. Even as it borrowed from earlier films such as the 1932 Boris Karloff THE MUMMY, it would also influence later films in turn; it is hard, for example, to imagine the 1937 Ronald Coleman LOST HORIZON without it, and even the look of the evil queen in Disney's 1938 SNOW WHITE is said to have been inspired by Gahagan's look and performance.

      The film has been released in several editions to the home market, and fans may be tempted by less expensive editions. A word to the wise: Don't. The film shows its age and there is no significant bonus material, but the Kino Video release (be it on VHS or DVD) offers what is probably the best print short of a digital restoration. Recommended for fans of 1930s fantasy cinema.

      Gary F. Taylor, aka GFT, Amazon Reviewer
      jkogrady

      Max Steiner's Masterpiece

      Anyone who loves epic music in pictures must see, or at least hear, this movie, which has little enough otherwise to recommend it other than its often striking visual inventiveness. It is, in a sense, the feminine flip side to "King Kong", and even shares certain thematic elements. My perspective is a bit unusual; I fell in love with the music when I was 16, years before I actually saw the film, by way of scratchy old transcription discs taped and distributed by the Max Steiner Music Society ages before "movie music" had won the respect it now enjoys. Steiner's score is in his most expressionistic mode, highly akin to "Kong" but more operatic; there is even a full-scale ballet in the last act! The music is a perfect accompaniment to Haggard's novel, of which I am also very fond despite its old-fashioned elements. I have this marvelous fantasy of a new remake, faithful to the book, with a new recording of Steiner's score! Alas, not too likely. Both the novel and the music are of an earlier age probably not commercial enough today. Helen Gahagan was actually an opera singer (years before becoming the famous "pink lady" of the Nixon campaign for California!) and her approach to the part is remote, perhaps more suited to a silent movie. Cinematographer Roy Hunt positively roasts the woman with light in an effort to give her an otherworldly quality. Randolph Scott and Helen Mack are both in way over their heads, although subsidiary actors like Samuel Hinds, Lumsden Hare, Noble Johnson and the immortal Gustav van Seyffertitz come off rather better. Nigel Bruce does his standard pompous British ass, which is a pity, as he was capable of much better. The decor is great fun: this is the palace of the Emperor Ming the Merciless' dreams, if only he'd had the budget! But the superb score overrides all else. It would probably not be appropriate for me to openly hawk CDs in this place, but the original soundtrack of this picture is available from Brigham Young University archive. Beg, borrow or steal it today! The ballet sequence is as powerful as anything in Stravinsky, and no higher praise is possible. A pity the movie is not equal to its soundtrack; but that's a problem Steiner ran into more than once in his career.
      7Bunuel1976

      She (1935) ***

      Merian C. Cooper, co-creator of KING KONG (1935), turned his eyes to another long-lost civilization for this epic fantasy whose driving force, however, is not amazing special effects but rather the theme of reincarnation and love spanning several centuries (hence its affinity with THE MUMMY [1932]: screenwriter John L. Balderston had been assigned to adapt the H. Rider Haggard novel around this same time, before the property was sold to RKO). Still, despite every effort on the part of writers Ruth Rose and Dudley Nichols and an interesting cast - Randolph Scott, Helen Gahagan (wife of Melvyn Douglas and whose sole film this was!), Helen Mack, Nigel Bruce (thankfully playing his part straight) and Gustav von Seyffertitz - to wring every ounce of romance and adventure out of its plot, the film's single most impressive contribution is the awe-inspiring production design (courtesy of RKO's in-house genius of art direction during this time, Van Nest Polglase). Max Steiner's score is also notable, evoking both the mystery of an unknown land as well as the dangers and passions lurking within.

      A word needs to be said about the DVD: I'm not sure how the film ended up at Kino since RKO titles are currently the property of Warner Bros., but picture quality is quite acceptable under the circumstances. However, the audio is a different matter entirely: it was so low that even when pushed to the limit, one can hardly discern what's being said (particularly during the climax)! I've had some discs whose audio was no more than discreet but never anything like this; it was a very frustrating experience, to be sure, and I wonder whether others who might have SHE on DVD feel the same way...

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      Related interests

      Judy Garland, Ray Bolger, Jack Haley, and Bert Lahr in The Wizard of Oz (1939)
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      Supernatural Fantasy
      Still frame
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      Sci-Fi

      Storyline

      Edit

      Did you know

      Edit
      • Trivia
        This film exists at the present time because silent film star Buster Keaton had a copy of the original print stored in his garage, which he gave to film historian Raymond Rohauer for preservation.
      • Goofs
        During the Sacrifice sequence, the priest holds a burning globe that has been anointed with fire. Two files of acolytes pass by him, pushing their globes near his to ignite them. The first acolyte, at screen right, pushes her globe near his but it doesn't light. She then quickly pushes it again towards his, but moves on when it doesn't ignite the second time.
      • Quotes

        Horace: But, who are you?

        She, Queen Hash-A-Mo-Tep of Kor: I am yesterday, and today, and tomorrow. I am sorrow, and longing, and hope unfulfilled. I am Hash-A-Mo-Tep. She. She who must be obeyed! I am I.

      • Crazy credits
        In the opening credits, each batch of credits is "wiped away" by smoke rising from the Flame of Life.
      • Alternate versions
        Also available in a computer-colorized version.
      • Connections
        Edited into RiffTrax Presents: She (2018)

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      FAQ16

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      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • July 12, 1935 (United States)
      • Country of origin
        • United States
      • Language
        • English
      • Also known as
        • Kraljica vekova
      • Filming locations
        • Prudential Studios - 5300 Melrose Avenue, Los Angeles, California, USA(Studio)
      • Production company
        • Merican C. Cooper Productions
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 1h 41m(101 min)
      • Color
        • Black and White
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.37 : 1

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