A Brilliant Conflict
... View MoreThis movie was so-so. It had it's moments, but wasn't the greatest.
... View MoreAmazing worth wacthing. So good. Biased but well made with many good points.
... View MoreThe film's masterful storytelling did its job. The message was clear. No need to overdo.
... View MoreFrom the Universal synopsis: Retired Inspector Blake of Scotland Yard (Crauford Kent) learns that Lord Blanton (Herbert Prior) has acquired the sacred "Love Ring"---a cursed jewel that has brought grief to its previous owners.Prince Darius (Albert Priscoe) seeks to obtain the ring, and the mummy of a princess of an ancient country to return them to his homeland. Blake and his servant, Jarvis (Monte Montague), find a card---The Queen of Diamonds---which is the mark of the most dangerous woman in the underworld. Mary Duveen (Grace Cunard), the Blanton housekeeper, is really the Queen, disguising herself as a spectacularly ugly crone. (Settle down...it's a lost film.) Darius comes to believe that Lady Diana Blanton (Florence Allen), Lord Blanton's daughter, is the reincarnation of Princess Xah Fari, and sets his sights on her also. His hypnotic influence soon has the girl experiencing dreams of a vanished civilization.Mary acquires the ring and Jarvis recovers it and Mary steals it back and plants it on Lady Di, and then lures her to a Limehouse den but Blake and Jarvis follow and rescue her and the ring. Learning that Diana intends to give the ring to Darius, to end the effects of the curse, Blake substitutes a copy. He accuses Mary of theft, and reveals evidence that the real Queen of Diamonds is in prison, and she admits to being an agent for a wealthy American collector who seeks the ring. She assumed the guise of the Queen in order to gain the cooperation of the underworld. Blake persuades her to assist him against Darius, who he believes to be "Diamond" Donovan, an international criminal. But Darius convinces Diana that Blake and Mary are working against her, and she turns against the Scotland Yard man.All of this in the first four chapters and with six more to go, it gets thicker than a bowl of week-old oatmeal from there to The End. Or, if the synopsis reflects the actual production, it does.
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