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Knight Without Armour
Overlook Pick

Knight Without Armour

The woman of flame -- the man of steel -- together !
59
User Score19 ratings
TMDB 5.916+19371h 40mEnglish
HistoryDramaAdventureRomance

Synopsis

In the last days of Czarist Russia, Russian-speaking Briton A.J. Fothergill is enlisted by his government to go undercover as Bolshevik radical Peter Ouranoff in an attempt to gain access to the revolutionaries' inner circle. Tasked with accompanying lovely aristocrat Alexandra Vladinoff from Moscow to Petrograd to be tried for crimes against the proletariat, Peter attempts to spirit her out of the war-torn country.

Director
Jacques FeyderFrom TMDB credits
Studio
London Films Productions3 production companies
Release
July 23, 1937Released
Box Office
Budget $350,000

Top Cast

8 of 18
Marlene Dietrich
Marlene Dietrich
Countess Alexandra Vladinoff
Robert Donat
Robert Donat
Ainsley J. Fothergill / Peter Ouronov
Irene Vanbrugh
Irene Vanbrugh
Duchess of Zorin
Herbert Lomas
Herbert Lomas
General Gregor Vladinoff
Austin Trevor
Austin Trevor
Col. Adraxine
Basil Gill
Basil Gill
Axelstein
David Tree
David Tree
Alexis Maronin
John Clements
John Clements
Poushkoff

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
CinemaSerf
Jun 20, 2022

Now you've got to keep an eye on the plot in this little espionage/counter espionage thriller as Robert Donat is a Brit sent to spy on the Bolsheviks and gets caught up in all sorts of shenanigans that lands him in Siberia until 1917 when, amidst all the chaos he alights upon the beautiful "Countess" (Marlene Dietrich) and both have to try and get the hell out of a rapidly imploding Russia. The two stars gel quite well, once they start sharing scenes together and although the story follows a pretty well trodden path, the two , together with a few familiar faces from British cinema (John Clements, Irene Vanbrugh and a rather good, drunken, Miles Malleson) manage to keep this slightly over-long escape story going. Harry Stradling's photography re-creates well the coldness of the Russian climate (from Buckinghamshire!) and the eeriness and devastation of a messy, brutal revolution and Lajos Biró's adaptation of the novel keeps pretty much to the plot.

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