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Benjamin Christensen | Claude Zoret | |
Robert Garrison | Charles Switt - Journalist | |
Nora Gregor | Princess Lucia Zamikoff | |
Grete Mosheim | Mrs. Alice Adelsskjold | |
Walter Slezak | Michael | |
Max Auzinger | Jules - Majordomo | |
Alexander Murski | Mr. Adelsskjold | |
Karl Freund | LeBlanc - Art Dealer | |
Wilhelmine Sandrock | Widow de Monthieu | |
John Travolta | Michael | |
Andie MacDowell | Dorothy Winters | |
William Hurt | Frank Quinlan |
Director |
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Producer | Nora Ephron
Erich Pommer |
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Writer/Composer |
Thea von Harbou
Carl Theodor Dreyer Herman Bang |
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Cinematography |
Karl Freund
Rudolph Maté |
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Mikaël is an artist who rises as his teacher, the aging Zoret, falls. Zoret gives Mikaël his start, and their relationship is sexual as well. Then Mikaël takes up with the Princess Zamikoff, selling gifts from Zoret and even stealing from the master to pay for his carnal and luxurious life with her. He abandons Zoret, whose health begins to fail but who also discovers spirituality in his solitude. In a subplot, Alice Adelsskjold cuckolds her husband and takes a lover, the Duke of Monthieu; their relationship, infused with the eroticism of art, also gives way to religion as the duke becomes ill. Written by |
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