Flame Of Stamboul

1951
5.3| 1h8m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 05 March 1951 Released
Producted By: Columbia Pictures
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Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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An American agent working undercover as a cafe pianist in Cairo sets out to capture a notorious spy and jewel thief known as "The Voice". Director Ray Nazarro's 1951 drama stars Richard Denning, Lisa Ferraday, Norman Lloyd, George Zucco, Nestor Paiva, Donald Randolph and Dick Elliott.

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Director

Ray Nazarro

Production Companies

Columbia Pictures

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Flame Of Stamboul Audience Reviews

Vashirdfel Simply A Masterpiece
Dynamixor The performances transcend the film's tropes, grounding it in characters that feel more complete than this subgenre often produces.
InformationRap This is one of the few movies I've ever seen where the whole audience broke into spontaneous, loud applause a third of the way in.
Erica Derrick By the time the dramatic fireworks start popping off, each one feels earned.
mark.waltz A ridiculous black and white adventure has French girl Lisa Ferraday framed for killing a dancing girl so she can take her place and get secret documents out of Cairo. This is so unadventurous and boring that necessary gun shots come out of nowhere to make sure that the audience is still awake. Handsome but dull Richard Denning has no spark with the beautiful but blank Ferreday whom he falls in love with while trying to find evidence against her. This is the type of film I might have liked as a kid (like "The Magic Carpet" with Lucille Ball as a flaming red headed Arab princess), but this has the audacity not to even be camp. At least that was in Technicolor; this was in black and white in spite of being made afterwards. The aging George Zucco is heavily shadowed as "The Voice" and escapes embarrassment by giving the bulk of his performance from a hidden microphone. Fellow villain Nestor Paiva is not so lucky. Slow editing and cheap production values are so obvious. It's films like this that would keep kids at home on a Saturday morning watching old westerns and eventually cartoons.
gerdeen-1 "Flame of Stamboul" begins in Istanbul but is mostly set in Cairo, Egypt. It was made just before big social and political changes swept the Middle East, and this film has a kind of 1940s feel to it. But unlike the '40s spy classics, it lacks suspense.The "Flame" in the title is a nightclub dancer who agrees to take part in a big jewel heist, never guessing that it is really an espionage operation. She also doesn't realize that American agents are on her trail.The beginning of the movie is the best, when things are still murky enough to be intriguing. But once it becomes clear what's going, the plot just kind of unfolds, without any interesting twists. And the dancing is unimpressive, even though the "Flame" is supposed to be the hottest entertainer in the Levant.George Zucco plays the master spy known as "the Voice." This was one of his final films before he retired for health reasons, and he looks sluggish and frail. You could say the same about the movie.
GUENOT PHILIPPE A rare but pretty boring little movie which takes place between Turkey and Egypt. A very talkative film with little action, and a story which nobody cares of. A mix up of espionage and adventure, intrigue among the Eastern spell. Lisa Ferraday and Richard Denning bring not enough help to stay you awake. Anyway I am glad to have it in my collection. When you're a movie addict, you must accept all kind of features. But I must admit that the producer - Wallace Mc Donald - has done better in his career. I saw others of his movies - I don't remember the titles, sorry - but they were far more interesting.