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The Mysterious Lady

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The Mysterious Lady
Lobby card
Directed byFred Niblo
Screenplay byBess Meredyth
Marian Ainslee and Ruth Cummings (titles)
Based onWar in the Dark
1915 novel
by Ludwig Wolff
Produced byFred Niblo
StarringGreta Garbo
Conrad Nagel
Gustav von Seyffertitz
CinematographyWilliam H. Daniels
Edited byMargaret Booth
Distributed byMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release date
  • August 4, 1928 (1928-08-04)
Running time
89 minutes (U.S.)
96 minutes (UK)
CountryUnited States
LanguagesSilent film
English intertitles
Budget$336,973.22[1]
Box office$1,084,000 (worldwide rentals)[2]

The Mysterious Lady (1928) is a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer silent film romantic drama, starring Greta Garbo, Conrad Nagel, and Gustav von Seyffertitz, directed by Fred Niblo, and vaguely based on the novel War in the Dark by Ludwig Wolff.[3]

Full film

The film grossed $543,000 in the US and $541,000 elsewhere, grossing $1,084,000 worldwide, its profit was $369,000.[4]

Plot

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In Vienna, Captain Karl von Raden (Conrad Nagel) purchases a returned ticket to a sold-out opera and finds himself sharing a loge with a lovely woman (Greta Garbo). Though she repulses his first advance, she does spend an idyllic day with him in the countryside, where romance blossoms.

Before Karl can return to duty, his uncle, Colonel Eric von Raden (Edward Connelly), the chief of the secret police, assigns him an important mission to deliver secret plans to officials in Berlin, but he also warns his nephew that the woman he just met is Tania Fedorova, a top Russian spy. Tania surprises Karl, meeting him on board the train. Here she professes her love to him, but he informs her that he has been deceived, and is well aware that she is a spy. Dejected by his reaction, Tania leaves his compartment.

When the train stops the next morning, Karl wakes up and finds the secret plans have been stolen. As a result, he is court martialed and sentenced to military degradation and imprisonment for treason. However, Colonel von Raden visits him in prison and arranges for his release. He sends his nephew to Warsaw, posing as a Serbian pianist, to seek out the identity of the real traitor and thus exonerate himself.

In Warsaw, by chance, Karl is asked to play at a private party where he once again crosses paths with Tania. She is being escorted by General Boris Alexandroff (Gustav von Seyffertitz), the infatuated head of the Russian Military Intelligence Department. Foolhardily, Karl plays a tune from the opera they attended together. She recognizes it, but does not betray him. As the party goers are leaving, she slips away for a few stolen moments with her love. The jealous Alexandroff suspects their feelings for each other. He hires Karl to play the next day at a ball he is giving at his mansion for Tania's birthday.

While Alexandroff and Tania are alone in his home office, he receives a parcel containing the latest secrets stolen by the traitor, whom he casually identifies as Max Heinrich. Later, Tania steals the documents, gives them to Karl, and sends him out via a secret passage. However, it is all a trap. Alexandroff comes in and tells Tania that what she stole was mere blank paper; he shows her the real documents. He pulls out a gun and announces that he intends to use it on Karl, who has been captured outside. She struggles with Alexandroff and manages to fatally shoot him; the sound goes unheard amidst the merriment of the party. When the guards bring the prisoner, she pretends the general is still alive and wants to see him alone. She and Karl escape with the incriminating documents and get married.

Cast

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Home media

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Warner Home Video released The Mysterious Lady to DVD in 2005 as part of a box set called The Garbo Silents Collection with a music score by Vivek Maddala. The home video version contains an audio commentary track by film historians Jeffrey Vance and Tony Maietta.

References

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  1. ^ Alexander Walker; Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (October 1980). Garbo: a portrait. Macmillan. p. 184. ISBN 978-0-02-622950-0. Retrieved July 27, 2010.
  2. ^ The Eddie Mannix Ledger, Los Angeles, California: Margaret Herrick Library, Center for Motion Picture Study.
  3. ^ "The Mysterious Lady". The Progressive Silent Film List. silentera.com.
  4. ^ "The Mysterious Lady".
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