Cobra (1925 film)

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Cobra
Directed by Joseph Henabery
Produced by Adolph Zukor
Jesse L. Lasky
Written by Anthony Coldeway
Based on Cobra 
by Martin Brown
Starring Rudolph Valentino
Nita Naldi
Casson Ferguson
Gertrude Olmstead
Cinematography Harry Fischbeck
Dev Jennings (J. Devereaux Jennings)
Editing by John H. Bonn
Studio Famous Players-Lasky/Ritz-Carlton Films
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
Release dates
  • November 30, 1925 (1925-11-30)
Running time 70 minutes/7 reels (6,895 feet)
Country United States
Language Silent
English intertitles

Cobra is a 1925 American silent film starring Rudolph Valentino and Nita Naldi. It is the screen adaptation of the play Cobra written by Martin Brown, which played at the Hudson Theatre on Broadway in 1924.[1]

Plot

Valentino plays Count Rodrigo Torriani, an Italian noble. A charming libertine, his weakness is women – the "cobras" referred to in the title of the film.

Roridgo accepts an invitation from friend Jack Dorning (Ferguson) to come to New York City to work as an antiques expert. While the job is rewarding, Rodrigo finds the temptation from the women surrounding him, including Dorning's secretary Mary Drake (Olmstead) and wife Elise (Naldi) challenging.

Rudolph Valentino and Nita Naldi in Cobra.

When Jack is away, Elise reveals to Rodrigo that she is still in love with him. The two arrange to meet at a hotel. However, at the last minute, Rodrigo remembers he cannot betray his friend and refuses to go to the rendezvous. It turns out to be a wise decision; the hotel burns to the ground in the middle of the night, killing Elise.

Rodrigo desperately wants a relationship with Mary. However, after Elise's death, he turns Mary's attentions toward Jack and decides to leave New York. The film ends with Rodrigo gazing out at the sea and the Statue of Liberty as he sets sail back to Europe.

The production of Cobra was marred by bickering and soaring production costs. Furthermore, its studio Paramount Pictures, unhappy with the final film and fearing it would flop with audiences and critics, held off releasing it until Valentino (whose popularity had declined somewhat) appeared in a stronger, unequivocally successful picture. Eventually Cobra was released in late 1925, a few weeks after what proved to be Valentino's comeback feature, The Eagle.

Cobra has survived and has been made available to the public, on both VHS and DVD, by independent film dealers and major movie distributors.

Cast

References

External links

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