In Kronberg, the capital of a middle European kingdom, Regina V, known as the Mad Queen, nurses a "morbid jealous passion" for Prince Wolfram, known among the women of the land as Wild Wolfie. We first see him arriving at the castle at dawn, drunk and stumbling and accompanied by a pack of whores. Regina, who has had her morning bath with glasses of champagne served by her courtiers, holding her white cat against her naked breast, is furious and orders Wolfram to drill his squadron in the hot sun all day. During the march, he crosses paths with a group of orphan convent girls. One of them, Patricia Kelly, is coyly flirtatious and as she curtsies, her panties accidently drop to her feet. Wolfram laughs; she crumples them up and tosses them at his face. He smells them approvingly and tosses them back, clearly attracted to her. At the convent, the Mother Superior tells her to pray for "deliverance from worldly thoughts," but she prays to meet up with Wild Wolfie again. Meanwhile, the Queen decides to tame Wolfram once and for all, and orders their marriage to occur the next day. At midnight, Wolfram and a buddy sneak into the convent, set a small fire for distraction, and carry Patricia away to the castle where she and Wolfram share a rich dinner (she has champagne for the first time and says it’s "like drinking fireworks") and some heavy duty petting in his bed until Regina storms in with a whip, applying it first to Wolfram and then chasing Patricia around the palace. She escapes and, mortified, jumps into a river, hoping to die. She is rescued, taken back to the convent, and sent away to Dar es Salaam in East Africa to attend to her dying aunt. Patricia discovers that her aunt is the boss of a bunch of ladies "of the horizontal profession," in other words, she's the madam of a notorious brothel. Over the aunt's deathbed, as last rites are being performed, Patricia undergoes a bizarre marriage ceremony to Jan, the old, crippled, and ugly assistant to the aunt, during which she imagines Wolfram's figure instead of Jan's. In a rushed and incomplete conclusion, Pat becomes the madam (Queen Kelly of the title), Jan is killed in a barroom fight, and Wolfram eventually comes riding to her rescue to have her become his queen in Kronberg.
This silent film was the last film directed by Erich von Stroheim and it was never properly finished. The star, Gloria Swanson, was also the producer, and when she began to dislike the direction the film was taking, she and her money man, Joseph P. Kennedy, stopped production after a couple of months. A few years later, Swanson had a different ending shot, in which Pat’s leap into the river leads to her death, with final shots of a chastened and mourning Wolfram. This version was shown in Europe but was not popular, partly perhaps because of the talkie revolution. The 100 minute print now in circulation retains the original ending but because production was abruptly ended, it’s a bit raggedy and explanatory stills and titles have been inserted by Dennis Doros based on von Strohem's published screenplay. But the unfinished state of the film gives it a unique dreamlike quality and it's well worth seeing for silent film fans.
In addition to the choppy narrative, there are other problems. Kelly is a schoolgirl, perhaps eighteen years old at the most; Swanson was thirty and could perhaps pass for mid-twenties, but it's impossible to accept her as a teenager. Otherwise, she's fine here, giving a performance that blurs the character's motivations; sometimes she seems sweet and innocent, sometimes sensual and knowing. In the somewhat truncated brothel scenes, which are almost breathtakingly unsavory, she comes off as truly horrified at her surroundings and her prospects—it helps that Tully Marshall is grotesquely convincing as Jan. Walter Byron (pictured with Swanson at left) is exactly right as Wolfram: handsome, sexy, energetic, yet just weak enough that he can't bring himself to rebel against Regina for Kelly's sake. He never quite made it in sound films, though he kept acting, often in uncredited roles, until the early 1940s, and I liked him quite a bit here. Seena Owen, who retired from films in the early sound years, is good as Regina, though she's mostly called on to strike poses and glower. The sets are lovely and the cinematography is often luminous. The footage that Gloria Swanson, as Norma Desmond, is watching at her home in Sunset Boulevard is a prayer scene from Queen Kelly. Though this wild movie has been tamed by its unfinished status, it is still a memorable viewing experience. On YouTube, the 100-minute version is the restored print, though the cut version Swanson prepared is also available; look for the hour-long version. [YouTube]















