Countess Dorchy
Genevieve Tobin
Countess Dorchy

“A World of Film Fans Voted Him a Star!”
Captain Orloff is sent to Bucharest to capture a Mata Hari type of spy, but many different women fit the bill and are attractive enough to make one question one's allegiance.
Countess Dorchy
Genevieve Tobin
Countess Dorchy
Baroness Corri
Betty Compson
Baroness Corri
Captain Orloff
Ivan Lebedeff
Captain Orloff
Madame Blinis
Ilka Chase
Madame Blinis
Colonel George Gorin
Purnell Pratt
Colonel George Gorin
Gamble
Colin Campbell
Gamble
Suave Man
Arthur Edmund Carewe
Suave Man
Ambassador
Edward Martindel
Ambassador
General
John St. Polis
General
Wife
Judith Vosselli
Wife
Colonel
George Irving
Colonel
Natalie
Rita La Roy
Natalie
There were a spate of these Russian Imperial espionage dramas made, and this one is probably the weakest I have seen. The adventure, if that is what it is, centres around the suave and debonaire "Capt. Orloff" (Ivan Lebedeff) who is sent to Bucharest to identify a glamorous spy. Once he gets there, though, he is presented with a plethora of beauties from which to choose - and it becomes distinctly possible that his is the loyalty that will be compromised! Any acting plaudits belong to Genevieve Tobin and Betty Compson, with the odd comedic interlude at the hands (or mouth) of Ilka Chase as "Madama Blinis". Lebedeff is terrible - no other word for it. He has a certain charm that might well have worked for him in silent cinema, but his performance here is wooden, his accent straight out of a school pantomime and only the daftest woman on the planet would ever fall for his rather linear allure - so any sense of intrigue falls pretty flat from early on too. Give it a miss...
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