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Rembrandt (1936)

6.8 | Nov 06, 1936 (GB) | Drama, History | 01:25

He knew all women! Their lives...Loves...Their souls!

A character study depicting the life of Rembrandt Van Rijn at the height of his fame in the mid 1600s. Beginning with the death of his wife, Rembrandt's work takes a dark turn, which offends many of his patrons.

Featured Crew

Director, Presenter, Producer
Writer
Third Assistant Director
Sound Recordist
Director of Photography
Boom Operator
Costume Designer
Music Director

Cast

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Charles Laughton
Rembrandt van Rijn
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Gertrude Lawrence
Geertje Dirx
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Elsa Lanchester
Hendrickje Stoffels
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Edward Chapman
Fabrizius
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Walter Hudd
Capt. Banning Cocq
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Roger Livesey
Beggar Saul
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John Bryning
Titus van Rijn
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Sam Livesey
Auctioneer
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Herbert Lomas
Harmenzs van Rijn
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Allan Jeayes
Dr. Tulp

Reviews

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CinemaSerf
7 | Jun 19, 2022
There's something magical about the characterisations in this biopic of the legendary 17th century Dutch painter. Not just Charles Laughton in the title role, but Elsa Lanchester as Hendrickje Stoffels and Gertrude Lawrence as Geertje Dirx - the women in his life - all add to the charm and create an effortless depth of personality for this film. Alexander Korda clearly had a rapport with his stars, and a creative vision that enabled this story to flow without resorting to it just being a chronology of his artist achievements. Of course it's all, largely, speculation - but it is an engaging look at not just how he lived his life (quite irresponsibly) but of just how hand-to-mouth many artists of the time lived and yet now - as it states in the prologue "no millionaire could ever fund the acquisition of his works". Geoffrey Toye is to be commended for his gentle, sympathetic accompaniment to this charismatic depiction of artistic greatness - flaws and all, and although Laughton does revert a bit to type at the end (à la Henry VIII from 1933) it's still a super film to watch.