Tempest (1928)
- Theatrical MPAA Rating:
- Theatrical Feature Running Time:
- 105 mins
Theatrical Release Information:
Tempest
One of John Barrymore's best-remembered silent films (mainly because it is one of the few that has remained in constant circulation), The Tempest is set before, during and after the Russian Revolution. Barrymore plays a Czarist military officer who is haughtily rejected by aristocratic Camilla Horn. She goes so far as to strip Barrymore of his rank and toss him into prison (allowing him the opportunity for a wholly irrelevant, but fascinating, "mad" scene). Comes the Revolution, and Barrymore is freed. Put in charge of the Red army, Barrymore now wields the power of life and death over the aristocrats. When a humbled Camilla is brought before him, he refuses to sign her death warrant, but instead kills his hateful superior officer and escapes with his new-found love to the safety of Europe. Barrymore's leading lady Camilla Horn has previously made an excellent impression as Gretchen in F. W. Murnau's production of Faust (1926); her casting in Tempest, however, is due less to her histrionic talents that to the fact that she was the girlfriend of United Artists executive Joseph M. Schenck. Originally, the film was to have been directed by Russian expatriate Victor Tourjanksy, but his working methods were too slow for Hollywood tastes; he was replaced by American journeyman Sam Taylor, who was swift, efficient and (in this instance at least) surprisingly imaginative. The principal artistic value in Tempest lies in the performance by John Barrymore and the cinematography of Charles Rosher, whose Rosher Kino Portrait Lens enabled the 46-year-old Barrymore to appear at least two decades younger on screen. An uncredited Lewis Milestone also was among those at work on the production. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Complete Cast of Tempest:
Camilla Horn also in Eternal Love , Faust
Ullrich Sr. Haupt also in The Iron Mask
Albert Conti also in The Eagle , Gigolettes of Paris , The Merry-Go-Round , Freaks
Lena Malena also in Hell's Angels
Tempest Trivia
Other Movies From 1928
The Farmer's Wife
The Fall of the House of Usher
The Passion of Joan of Arc
Sadie Thompson
Spies
Steamboat Bill, Jr.
Storm over Asia
That Certain Thing
Un Chien Andalou
The Battle of the Sexes
La Sirene Des Tropiques
Uncle Tom's Cabin
The Port of Missing Girls
Sex in Chains
More Movies
War movies from 1928
War movies from 1923
War movies from 1930
Best War Films from 1928
Best War Films from 1923
Best War Films from 1930




