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Flesh and the Devil (1926)
In director Clarence Brown's glossy, melodramatic,
beautifully-photographed sensual silent film about a bitter and deadly
love triangle (with a homosexual subtext) and a bond of friendship
between two men (Leo and Ulrich):
- the many extended love scenes between real-life
lovers Greta Garbo and John Gilbert in their first film together
-- amoral, insatiably sexual and sultry temptress-siren Countess
Felicitas von Rhaden (Greta Garbo) and Austrian soldier Leo von
Harden (John Gilbert)
- in a shadowy garden scene, he told her: "You
are very beautiful" to which she responded: "You are very
young" - their faces lit only by a single match flame as they
shared a cigarette together, exquisitely photographed and very erotic
- the sharing of their first steamy kiss together, in
the first of the film's three extended love scenes - and reportedly,
this was Hollywood's first French (open-mouthed) kiss on screen
- their next kiss on a chaise-lounger was allegedly
the first-ever horizontal-position kiss in an American film - when
they were discovered by her enraged, wronged aristocratic husband
Count Rhaden (Marc MacDermott) clenching his outstretched fingers
at them into a fist - in silhouette
In Adulterous Love: The Countess and Leo
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Chaise-Lounge Horizontal Kiss
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Discovered by Her Husband the Count - With Clenched
Fist
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- later after a deadly duel (seen in long-shot and
in silhouette) between Rhaden and Leo, the widowed Countess Felicitas
married Leo's best childhood male friend Ulrich von Eltz (Lars
Hanson) while Leo was away and serving for 5 years in the military
- when Leo returned after serving in the military for
a reduced term of three years, he was tempted to continue carrying
on a sinful adulterous affair with Felicitas (now married to his
friend Ulrich) after she told him: "Why do we pretend? I love
you, and you love me"
- during a communion scene in the church, after Leo
drank wine from the cup, Felicitas turned the goblet back to where
his lips had touched before drinking herself
- driven emotionally mad with lust for each other,
they succumbed to kissing again during Ulrich's absence, vowing love-til-death
to each other, until she changed her mind (after being presented
with a diamond bracelet by Ulrich upon his return) - she double-crossed
Leo, and accused him of trying to choke and kill her
- in the film's tragic conclusion (a second dueling
scene over love), the two long-time friends (Leo and Ulrich) prepared
to duel the following morning for Felicitas' love on the Isle of
Friendship (evoking childhood memories) - but reconciled and embraced
- while the duplicitous femme fatale Felicitas had been persuaded
to stop the duel by Ulrich's virtuous, younger teenaged sister Hertha
(Barbara Kent) (who always had a secret crush on Leo, pure unselfish
love in contrast to Felicitas, but was ignored); she raced to the
men but fatefully fell through thin lake ice and drowned to break
her spell over the two men
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Garden Scene: Illuminated by Match
First Steamy Kiss
Drinking From Communion Cup
Leo and the Countess
Ulrich and Leo Embracing Before Duel
Drowning Death of Felicitas
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