As the government of Alpania, a seaside European republic, is threatened by revolutionary monarchists, three American adventurers--Jack Perry, Dick Sayre, and Lyn Brook--arrive in the countr... Read allAs the government of Alpania, a seaside European republic, is threatened by revolutionary monarchists, three American adventurers--Jack Perry, Dick Sayre, and Lyn Brook--arrive in the country and immediately become embroiled in the civil strife. Perry offends the monarchists, who... Read allAs the government of Alpania, a seaside European republic, is threatened by revolutionary monarchists, three American adventurers--Jack Perry, Dick Sayre, and Lyn Brook--arrive in the country and immediately become embroiled in the civil strife. Perry offends the monarchists, who capture him and sentence him to death before a firing squad. Brook rescues his compatriot... Read all
- Lyn Brook
- (as Fred Covert)
- Jacques Rudanyi
- (as Rodolph Valentino)
- Director
- Writers
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Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe original film featured the then unknown Rudolph Valentino. To cash in on his rise to stardom, it was re-edited to feature more of him. Various shots were repeated several times; long shots were blown up into close-ups and inter-cut with other footage; some scenes were projected on a loop, so that Rudolph Valentino repeated the same motions several times over; one scene was used as a flashback; and out-takes from the original were inserted into the new film. In addition, the locale of the new picture was switched from World War 1 Germany to a desert island by the simple expedient of inserting shots of bathing beauties on a palm-fringed beach throughout the film.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Hollywood: Single Beds and Double Standards (1980)
THE ISLE OF LOVE "The Isle of Love"(1922) cut of "Over the Rhine" is the only version of the footage that survives today and has repeated scenes of Valentino and Rappe to the point that it makes the story incongruent. Virginia Rappe for all her troubles was obviously a beautiful and alluring woman and seeing her in this movie only accentuates the tragedy of her death. For viewers who are watching closely and have a sense of history about bathing suits, the style of frumpy bathing suits the girls at the beach wear early in the film dates from 1918 and the pre-war era. They are too conservative for 1922 which by then had see America have it's first Miss America contest in which the contestants wore 'one-piece bathing suits'. The story throughout "The Isle of Love" keeps tilting back and forth to a German war story concerning Julian Eltinge to the frolic at the beach without any sensible writing tying the two themes together. The title of the film misleads the viewer into thinking he's going to get frolic & gaiety on a tropical isle somewhere and what appears on the screen is some wacky story concerning Germans and a crossdresser. Indeed when Valentino and Rappe are on the screen it is a relief as they are so natural together and have great chemistry in the closing scenes riding in the touring car. The southern California scenery in the beach scenes are nicely captured by director Fred Balshofer and crew. If only they had not shot so much footage with the bumbling bearded beachcomber with spiked German helmet. He's as annoying as El Brendel. Mind this film has a lot of risqué scenes that would be censored for sure a decade later. One or two of the ladies at the beach have form fitting attire a la Annette Kellerman and Rappe has a diaphanous dress on showing her beautiful cleavage and rear end, before jumping into a pool. It leaves nothing to the imagination. Watching silent movies like this on DVD or the internet with freeze frame options one can see scenes of nudity that wasn't meant for the original audiences. The Eltinge character's girlfriend played by Alma Francis for example can be seen at the end of the movie being rescued from a pool. Despite her long dress she is completely drenched and for a brief millisecond the sun gets behind her revealing that under the dress she has no underwear on. No doubt films like this is what almost caused Hollywood to be closed down in the 1920s. Perhaps director Balshofer discovered in Rappe a girl willing to strip down giving credence to Adela Rogers St. John's description of Rappe in a 1980s documentary that Rappe would drop her clothes at the slightest provocation. Alas "The Isle of Love" edit no doubt got rushed through the printer once again in 1926 and re-released after Valentino's death to take still further advantage of his appearance in the movie. These constant re-releases assured that we would have copies to view today.
Details
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- Also known as
- Over the Rhine
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Box office
- Budget
- $90,000 (estimated)
- Runtime50 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1