A seductive dancer (Marika Rökk) helps her uncle to fight against the closing of his casino. Through her feminine charm she achieves diplomatic success.A seductive dancer (Marika Rökk) helps her uncle to fight against the closing of his casino. Through her feminine charm she achieves diplomatic success.A seductive dancer (Marika Rökk) helps her uncle to fight against the closing of his casino. Through her feminine charm she achieves diplomatic success.
Carl Kuhlmann
- Paul Lamberg - Direktor des Spielcasinos Homburg
- (as Karl Kuhlmann)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaSupporting actor Karel Stepanek emigrated during the nearly three years of production and was replaced by Rudolf Carl. Cutting and new shooting came to 500,000 RM additional production cost, because color processing had been developed further.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Century of Cinema: Die Nacht der Regisseure (1995)
Featured review
I prepared myself to watch a bad film with many embarrassing moments, but I was very pleasantly surprised to actually enjoy this film very much. It is a bit uneven: it leaves an impression that the filmmakers were about to shoot a straight comedy first, and only then decided to add some big production numbers to make it "a musical". The main storyline runs quite smoothly and is only interrupted when an absolute necessity to introduce a new song arises. There are many legends about shooting the ballet on the grass ("A waltz for you and me") - it was redone repeatedly over a long period of time, and the result is... let's say, weird. But very campy at the same. Another song ("The music that never sounded") is totally unnecessary as well, and a bit above Miss Rökk's abilities, but features some nice closeups of the very young and fresh looking actress. "When a young man comes" is woven neatly into the action, and the last big revue, "Oh I love all the men", is a joy to watch. In her 1944 film "Die Frau meiner Träume", Miss Rökk and her husband-director recreate the Spanish setting, even her dress is pretty much the same. (In the same film she also sings a few bars of that very song in a seductive scene, wearing only a shower curtain.)
I wouldn't call "Women are the best diplomats" a bad film. With all its faults it still is quite entertaining. Marika Rökk's acting is not bad, and regarding her dancing... well try to be pirouetting on your toes on a lawn that's painted green with oil paint yourself! She was a superb tap dancer, but as the action takes place in the early 1800s, wearing a fluffy dress, bonnet and a parasol, that wouldn't have been a good idea. Otherwise some nice shots, rather rich colours and a kiss at the end. What else would you wish for?
Superbly restored, this film has now been released on DVD in Germany.
I wouldn't call "Women are the best diplomats" a bad film. With all its faults it still is quite entertaining. Marika Rökk's acting is not bad, and regarding her dancing... well try to be pirouetting on your toes on a lawn that's painted green with oil paint yourself! She was a superb tap dancer, but as the action takes place in the early 1800s, wearing a fluffy dress, bonnet and a parasol, that wouldn't have been a good idea. Otherwise some nice shots, rather rich colours and a kiss at the end. What else would you wish for?
Superbly restored, this film has now been released on DVD in Germany.
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Top Gap
By what name was Frauen sind doch bessere Diplomaten (1941) officially released in Canada in English?
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