The Red Dance | |
---|---|
Directed by | Raoul Walsh |
Written by |
Malcolm Stuart Boylan Eleanor Browne Henry Leyford Gates (novel) |
Starring |
Dolores del Río Charles Farrell Ivan Linow |
Music by |
Erno Rapee S.L. Rothafel |
Cinematography |
Charles G. Clarke Jack A. Marta |
Edited by | Louis R. Loeffler |
Distributed by | Fox Film Corporation |
Release date
|
June 25, 1928 |
Running time
|
103 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Box office | $1.3 million |
The Red Dance (also known as The Red Dancer of Moscow), is a 1928 American film directed by Raoul Walsh, starring Dolores del Río and Charles Farrell, inspired in the novel by Henry Leyford Gates.
Tasia (Dolores del Río), a beautiful dancer lower class of Russia, falls heir to the throne Prince, Grand Duke Eugene (Charles Farrell), but only admired from a distance. At the outbreak of the Russian Revolution, the Duke falls in captivity and this allows Tasia be near him.
"There is a good deal of lethargy about the opening chapters of this offering, but interest picks up in the latter passages", wrote Mordaunt Hall of The New York Times. "There are some good scenes in this somewhat wild piece of work, but it is often incoherent."Variety singled out Ivan Linow's performance for praise and reported that the scenes of the uprising were successful, but "otherwise there wasn't much to direct in this story except to keep it going." Oliver Claxton of The New Yorker panned the film, writing, "how anybody with the slightest modicum of intelligence could fashion such a tale is beyond me....a little criticism would shoot the film so full of holes that it would resemble a Swiss cheese without the cheese. The odor, I am afraid, would still remain."