King Rudolf XIV / Carlo Rocco
Carl Brisson
King Rudolf XIV / Carlo Rocco

“ROMANTIC MUSICAL DRAMA!”
A Hollywood actor visits a mythical country where he looks like the king and confuses the queen.
King Rudolf XIV / Carlo Rocco
Carl Brisson
King Rudolf XIV / Carlo Rocco
Elaine, the Queen of Langenstein
Mary Ellis
Elaine, the Queen of Langenstein
Count Josef 'Peppi' von Schlapstaat
Edward Everett Horton
Count Josef 'Peppi' von Schlapstaat
Fraülein Mimi
Katherine DeMille
Fraülein Mimi
Conrad Q. Conley
Eugene Pallette
Conrad Q. Conley
Baron Kraemer, Lord Chamberlain
Arnold Korff
Baron Kraemer, Lord Chamberlain
Steffi
Marina Koshetz
Steffi
Ilonka
Rosita
Ilonka
Count Batthy
Stanley Andrews
Count Batthy
Chorine on Train (uncredited)
Jane Wyman
Chorine on Train (uncredited)
First Gentleman
Edwin Maxwell
First Gentleman
If you can imagine a “Prisoner of Zenda” with musical numbers, then you’re halfway there with this rather mixed up hybrid. We even have another “Rudolph” (Carl Brisson) who has been neglecting his queen (Mary Ellis), so she absconds from their palace telling him she shall only return once he mended his ways. Now the king does actually quite like his wife, and so when his beardless doppelgänger “Rocco” arrives in the kingdom, he is hired to take his place on the throne whilst the real monarch goes off to woo back his lady. Snag? Well there are two. Firstly, they end up with the ebullient “Conley” (Eugene Pallette) doing much of the governing - and reasonably well too. Secondly, the queen returns to her home and starts to feel a reignited affection for her husband - but not the right one! With the real king miles away and the false one increasingly embroiled in this romantic confusion, what’s going to happen next? Might treason be about to be committed? The story itself it completely forgettable fluff, but there are a few musical numbers from Messrs. Horan and Herendeen that do their job adequately and an entertainingly staged big set-piece dance number towards the end that rather sums up the stylish romantic escapism of the thing. Ellis plays well; Brisson has something of the Romanov to him which helps a little and both Pallette and Edward Everett Horton’s “Count Peppi” amiably enliven this soapy drama. You’ll never remember it, but it’s a watchable enough, cheerful, song and dance costume caper.
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