Frank returns to his homeland as an engineer, falls in love with Regine, the housemaid of his uncle, and marries her. Thanks to the intrigues of Floris, one of Frank's rejects, Regine is suspected of having an affair with another man. Depressed and desperate, she intends to commit suicide, but is saved by Frank in the last minute.
Overview
Reviews
Before his name became distinctly unfashionable, Adolf Walbrook took the lead in this unremarkable melodrama about an engineer "Reynold" who comes home and falls passionately in love with the charming but naive "Regine" (Luise Ullrich). They are quickly married but that doesn't suit one his old flames "Floris" (Olga Tschechowa) who is up for some meddling in their relationship - especially when she is able to suggest that perhaps "Regine" is seeing another man during his frequent absences on business. Desperate to convince her husband that she is honest whilst trying to keep a family secret from him, she contemplates wild solutions. Might her husband appreciate that he is being manipulated? Might he learn to trust her again? It's quite a decent production but the story is just too light and the characterisations too thin to stretch for ninety minutes. Ullrich delivers quite sensitively but there's little chemistry between her and Walbrook - even when they are in the throes of their early ardour, and he seems to be largely going thorough the motions without imbuing his persona with much charm. It's nicely scored and I'm sure I heard a little Marlene Dietrich grace the soundtrack, but otherwise it's a pretty standard romantic drama that I don't reckon I'll recall for long.