The Firebird is a 1934 American murder mystery film starring Verree Teasdale, Ricardo Cortez, Lionel Atwill and Anita Louise, directed by William Dieterle and produced and released by Warner Bros. It takes its title from the famed suite by Igor Stravinsky, which is heard occasionally during the film.
The Firebird | |
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Directed by | William Dieterle |
Written by | Charles Kenyon Jeffrey Dell (adaptation) |
Based on | the play Tűzmadár by Lajos Zilahy |
Starring | Verree Teasdale Ricardo Cortez Lionel Atwill Anita Louise |
Cinematography | Ernest Haller |
Edited by | Ralph Dawson |
Production company | Warner Bros. |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. / The Vitaphone Corp. |
Release date |
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Running time | 74-75 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
In Vienna, smarmy matinee idol Brandt moves into an upscale apartment building whose principal tenants are the elite Pointer family: John, Carola and daughter Mariette, who's just turned 18. One day, Brandt encounters Carola on the stairwell and insists she come up to his apartment that night, telling her if she doesn't, he'll tell her husband they had the affair anyway. Outraged, she files a formal complaint with the building's owners, demanding he be kicked out. But before that can happen, he is found dead from a gunshot wound. Naturally suspicion falls on a variety of suspects, most obviously John, and it's up to police inspector Miller to figure out which of them did it.[1]
The New York Times reviewer, Andre Sennwald, dismissed it as "an ordinary mystery melodrama." "Among the definite failings of this smoothly filmed edition of Lajos Zilahy's play is the circumstance that, like the original, it conceals the actual murderer from the audience for such an extended period that the motivation for the homicide never becomes completely real."[1]
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