IMDb RATING
5.8/10
1.8K
YOUR RATING
The star-crossed desert romance of a cloistered woman and a renegade monk.The star-crossed desert romance of a cloistered woman and a renegade monk.The star-crossed desert romance of a cloistered woman and a renegade monk.
- Nominated for 2 Oscars
- 1 win & 2 nominations total
Eric Alden
- Anteoni's Lieutenant
- (uncredited)
Louis Aldez
- Blind Singer
- (uncredited)
Harlan Briggs
- American Tourist in Hotel
- (uncredited)
John Bryan
- Brother Gregory
- (uncredited)
Pedro de Cordoba
- Gardener
- (uncredited)
Corky
- Bous-Bous the Dog
- (uncredited)
Nigel De Brulier
- Lector at Monastery
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaMost of the "Arabic" spoken in the film is gibberish.
- GoofsAs the abbot and the major are walking down the hall, the shadow of the boom microphone keeps pace with them on the lower left.
- Quotes
Count Anteoni: A man who fears to acknowledge his god, is unwise to set foot in the desert. The Arabs have a saying, Madame, the desert is the Garden of Allah.
- ConnectionsEdited into Tela Class: Costa dos Injuriados: Um Resort Muito Louco (2008)
- SoundtracksNo One But God and I Know What is in My Heart
(1936) (uncredited)
Written by Max Steiner
Sung offscreen by an unidentified woman at the hotel
Reprised offscreen by a chorus on the pilgrimage
Featured review
If you did "The Garden of Allah" today, you'd have to play it for camp. As produced in 1936, it nearly is anyway.
Marlene Dietrich, Charles Boyer, Basil Rathbone, C. Aubrey Smith, and Joseph Schildkraut star in this David O. Selznick Technicolor production. The story concerns a religious woman, Domini, who is in mourning for her father and visits the convent where she lived as a child. The Mother Superior encourages her to go out and live, as she was her father's caretaker and didn't get out into the world.
She meets Boris Androvsky, and he seems even more unfamiliar with the world than she. What she doesn't know is that he was a Trappist monk and has left the order. The two fall in love and marry. However, someone eventually recognizes him, and his secret is revealed.
I have to say, I feel sorry for any ex-Trappist monk running into gorgeous Marlene Dietrich, especially under a desert sky. The atmosphere of this film is very moody, the color beautiful, and the photography sensational. Filmed in California and Arizona, it looks for all the world like an exotic desert setting.
Even with all this, and a young, handsome Charles Boyer, the film comes off as melodramatic and slight. Partly I blame the overly-dramatic music, but let's face it, the script isn't very good.
Marlene Dietrich is very good and underplays her role; Boyer's role is really impossible. He's confused and miserable through most of it. He was an excellent actor and pulls it off, though. Rathbone doesn't have a big role, nor does Schildkraut, but they were two of the best character actors around.
"The Garden of Allah" is definitely worth seeing - it's wonderful to look at, and when you see the Cyndi Lauper video of "Time after Time," this is the film she was watching in the beginning of the song.
Marlene Dietrich, Charles Boyer, Basil Rathbone, C. Aubrey Smith, and Joseph Schildkraut star in this David O. Selznick Technicolor production. The story concerns a religious woman, Domini, who is in mourning for her father and visits the convent where she lived as a child. The Mother Superior encourages her to go out and live, as she was her father's caretaker and didn't get out into the world.
She meets Boris Androvsky, and he seems even more unfamiliar with the world than she. What she doesn't know is that he was a Trappist monk and has left the order. The two fall in love and marry. However, someone eventually recognizes him, and his secret is revealed.
I have to say, I feel sorry for any ex-Trappist monk running into gorgeous Marlene Dietrich, especially under a desert sky. The atmosphere of this film is very moody, the color beautiful, and the photography sensational. Filmed in California and Arizona, it looks for all the world like an exotic desert setting.
Even with all this, and a young, handsome Charles Boyer, the film comes off as melodramatic and slight. Partly I blame the overly-dramatic music, but let's face it, the script isn't very good.
Marlene Dietrich is very good and underplays her role; Boyer's role is really impossible. He's confused and miserable through most of it. He was an excellent actor and pulls it off, though. Rathbone doesn't have a big role, nor does Schildkraut, but they were two of the best character actors around.
"The Garden of Allah" is definitely worth seeing - it's wonderful to look at, and when you see the Cyndi Lauper video of "Time after Time," this is the film she was watching in the beginning of the song.
- How long is The Garden of Allah?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $2,200,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 19 minutes
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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