Die Schöne Lügnerin (1959)
Directed by Axel von Ambesser

Comedy / Romance / History

Film Review

Abstract picture representing Die Schone Lugnerin (1959)
This lavish Franco-German production is an all too obvious attempt to capitalise on the success of Romy Schneider in the three Sissi films that she starred in during the mid 1950s.  By this stage, the Austrian actress was becoming bored with the role she was expected to play in this kind of film, the sweet natured ingénue at whose feet noblemen would throw themselves.  Within a few years, she would venture into new horizons and far more challenging roles with her break into French cinema.  

Die Schöne Lügnerin
(aka La Belle et l'empereur) is a charming enough film, enriched by some enjoyable performances and the stunning production values that were typical of German and Fench period films of this time.   Needless to say, Romy Schneider steals the show through her grace and beauty, which light up every scene more brightly than a dozen floodlights.  The legendary mime artist Marcel Marceau makes a brief but memorable appearance, doing an amusing send up of Napoleon's attempt to conquer Europe - by ripping the countries off a wall map and crumpling them up.  (Political satire was so much more sophisticated in those days.
© James Travers 2009
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Film Synopsis

Vienna, 1815.  The crown heads of Europe have assembled for a congress that will determine the boundaries of their countries after the fall of the Emperor Napoleon.  Against this political intrigue, a young man named Martin is pursuing an intense love affair with a modest dressmaker named Fanny.  Passing himself off as a valet, Martin is in fact Count Waldau, the private secretary of Prince Meternich, the Austrian chancellor.   When Meternich learns of this, he persuades Fanny's grandfather to put an end to the love match.  Determined to see Martin, Fanny disguises herself as a man so that she can gain access to a state ball.  Having learned of Martin's deception, Fanny takes her revenge by allowing the Russian Emperor, Tsar Alexander I, to flirt with her.  What begins as a harmless joke soon has the potential to mushroom into a major diplomatic incident...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.


Film Credits

  • Director: Axel von Ambesser
  • Script: Answald Krüger, Maria Matray, Jean Bernard-Luc, Ernst Nebhut (play), Pierre O'Connell, Just Scheu (play)
  • Cinematographer: Christian Matras
  • Music: Martin Böttcher
  • Cast: Romy Schneider (Fanny Emmetsrieder), Jean-Claude Pascal (Zar Alexander der Erste), Paul Guers (Französischer Botschafter D'Aurignac), Jacqueline Marbaux (Fürstin Metternich), Helmut Lohner (Martin Graf Waldau), Charles Regnier (Fürst Metternich), Hans Moser (Großvater Emmetsrieder), Véra Valmont (Kaiserin Marie Louise), Josef Meinrad (Baron Hager), Helmut Qualtinger (Geheimpolizist Zawadil), Rolf Wanka (Graf Waldau Senior), Marcel Marceau (Mit seinem Ensemble), Margarethe Hruby (Lady Stewart), Willy Maertens (Graf Schleizenstein), Franz Schafheitlin (Englischer Botschafter Lord Stewart), Hans Schwarz Jr. (Fürst Razumofsky), Lou Seitz (Gräfin Haschlowitz), Erik von Loewis (General Seidelbast), Simone Paris, Gerhard Bronner
  • Country: West Germany / France
  • Language: German
  • Support: Color
  • Runtime: 90 min

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