HD · HDR
Foolish Wives
Overlook Pick

Foolish Wives

65
User Score107 ratings
TMDB 6.516+19222h 23mEnglish
DramaThriller

Synopsis

A con artist masquerades as Russian nobility and attempts to seduce the wife of an American diplomat.

Director
Erich von StroheimFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Universal Film Manufacturing Company1 production companies
Release
January 11, 1922Released
Box Office
$400,200Budget $1M

Top Cast

8 of 19
Erich von Stroheim
Erich von Stroheim
Count Wladislaw Sergius Karamzin
Rudolph Christians
Rudolph Christians
Andrew J. Hughes
Miss DuPont
Miss DuPont
Helen Hughes
Maude George
Maude George
Princess Olga Petchnikoff
Mae Busch
Mae Busch
Princess Vera Petchnikoff
Dale Fuller
Dale Fuller
Maruschka
Cesare Gravina
Cesare Gravina
Cesare Ventucci
Malvina Polo
Marietta

Trailers & Photos

No media available

Reviews

From TMDB users
CinemaSerf
Jul 6, 2022

It's a soap. Despite all the associated history of cuts, recuts and restoration it is still just a beautifully photographed soap opera. Erich von Stroheim did just about everything in this entertaining, if a little too cyclical, tale of a cad. That cad "Count Sergius Karanzim" (EVS) parades around the Côte D'Azur luring unsuspecting (wealthy) women to his rented villa in which he, with his two "cousins" (Maude George & Mae Busch as the Princesses "Petchnikoff") fleeces them relentlessly. For quite a while his charm, wit and guile provides them with a good living until he aims a little too high with the wife of an American diplomat in Monte Carlo. "Mrs. Hughes" (Miss Dupont) and her husband (Rudolph Christians) may well be about to put a spoke in the wheel of these confidence tricksters. It's good fun, this, with Von Stroheim eminently convincing as the con man and DuPont equally effective as his ditzy mark. The production is maybe a bit static, but at 100 years old, it is still delivered in a fashion that shows off the Mediterranean scenery whilst aiming one squarely between the eyes of the vacuous, riche, clientele who assumed their excesses of funds were adequate compensation for their gullibility, stupidity and naivety. It sags from time to time, so I am not hugely shocked that this original 21 reeler was scaled back somewhat. What we have here, though, still have flows well enough with succinct inter titles that are, at times, quite witty too. I am not sure I would ever bother to watch it again, but I am glad that I did. You can see here the template for so many films that followed.

More Like This

Browse all