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Auction History Result

6w1117 MISTRESS OF THE WORLD: SAVED BY WIRELESS LC 1922 fourth part in German epic series, rare!

Date Sold 12/10/2020
Sold For: Login or Register to see sold price.


An Original 1922 Vintage Theatrical Movie Lobby Card (LC; measures 11" x 14" [28 x 36 cm]) (Learn More)

Die Herrin Der Welt 4. Teil - Konig Macombe (released in the U.S. in 1922 as "Mistress of the World: Saved By Wireless"), the 1919 Joseph Klein & Uwe Jens Krafft German silent China adventure thriller ("From the novel by Karl Figdor") starring Mia May, Michael Bohnen, Lewis Brody, Nien Soen Ling, and Henry Sze. Note that this movie was made in Germany, and is widely considered to be the first "epic" German film ever made! It was released in eight parts in Germany (but was released in the United States by Paramount in four parts, combining two of the parts in each section, and each movie was presented as though it was entirely separate from the others). The plot of the movie is really wild. It seems that the Queen of Sheba gave King Solomon a treasure that ended up in China, and there is a map that leads to the treasure. A Danish woman answers an advertisement and goes to China to be a governess (just like in "The King and I"), but she is kidnapped when she gets there, and is forced to be a prostitute (not like "The King and I"!). She has many adventures, including meeting "The Rabbi of Kuan-Fu" (we are not sure what a rabbi was doing in China at this time), and the rabbi has the treasure map, but he dies before he can fully explain. After many more adventures, the young Danish woman finds the treasure and becomes the richest woman in the world, and sets out to "rule the world". She also seeks revenge against people who have wronged her, including ruining their lives and driving them to suicide (shades of "The Count of Monte Cristo"). Interestingly, the movie was going to be titled "The Countess of Monte Cristo"! The movie was produced by Joe May and starred his wife Mia May (she is the only actor who appears in all of the eight parts). Because the eight parts of the movie took place all over the world, the studio had to create a huge number of elaborate sets. The movie cost many millions of dollars to produce, and was the most expensive movie made in Germany to that time. At the time it was made and in the next two decades, it was widely regarded as one of the most important German movies ever, but in recent years, it has become almost completely forgotten. Perhaps it will be "rediscovered" someday, and assume its proper place in film history.
NOTE: Click on linked names to see a biography.
Important Added Info: Note that ANY movie paper items from this movie are incredibly rare. We have only previously auctioned a different scene card from this movie (and NO other movie paper) until we received this lobby card!

Note that the vast majority of collectors would assume that this is a title card, but it is not! In the mid to late 1920s, Paramount made many sets of lobby cards where the seven scene cards all LOOK like title cards, but the actual title card is different from the seven scene cards (not too long after this, Paramount abandoned title cards altogether for the most part for the next forty-odd years, instead using a posed portrait of the stars in place of a title card). In the case of this set, ALL eight cards seem to be scene cards! This scene card is from one of those sets where the scene cards are commonly mistaken for title cards. Please do not bid on it thinking it is a title card, as it is a scene card!

Condition: good to very good. There are some long scuff lines scattered in the image, but they are mostly only noticeable when the card is tilted to the light. There is paper loss in each blank corner and a thin strip of darkening in the extreme left blank edge of the card. Note that this card is completely unrestored and there is not a single piece of tape on either the front or back!
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