Still image from the 1940 film Comrade X.

Comrade X

Directed by King Vidor

An American warms up an icy Russian streetcar conductor.

1940 1h 30m Comedy TV-G

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CAST
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0

King Vidor, Director
198681|94180
King Vidor
Director

1

Clark Gable, McKinley B. Thompson
67232|32546
Clark Gable
McKinley B. Thompson

3

Oscar Homolka, Vasiliev
88544|119590
Oscar Homolka
Vasiliev

5

Eve Arden, Jane Wilson
5233|49968
Eve Arden
Jane Wilson

FULL SYNOPSIS

McKinley B. Thompson, a newspaper reporter for the Texas Bugle , masquerades as an irresponsible roue in order to hide his identity as Comrade X, the mysterious reporter who is sending embarrassing stories about Russia to a big newspaper syndicate. Thompson learns that Vanya, the valet in his Moscow hotel, has discovered his secret identity when the old man demands that the reporter take his daughter out of the country before she is shot as a Communist. Under threat of exposure, Thompson agrees to meet Vanya's daughter, a streetcar conductor who uses the name Theodore because only men are allowed to drive streetcars. Thompson tries to convince the girl to go to America with him to spread the gospel of Communism, but she stubbornly refuses to leave until she has had time to investigate him. Later that night, Theodore appears on Thompson's doorstep and announces that they will be married because that is the only way they can leave the country to spread Communism. After returning from their perfunctory wedding ceremony, Thompson is arrested with his bride by police commissar Vasiliev and questioned about the secret camera of Comrade X that was found in Vanya's room. Sentenced to death by the state, Thompson offers to expose the head of the counter-revolution in exchange for his life and those of Vanya and Theodore. Taken to the commissar's office, Thompson is shocked to find not Vasiliev but Michael Bastakoff, the new commissar and the former leader of the resurgents. Tricking Bastakoff by offering to turn over his evidence, Thompson seizes the opportunity to escape with Vanya and Theodore. The threesome steal a Russian general's tank complete with the general and, followed by the Soviet army, rumble their way to freedom across the Rumanian border.


VIDEOS
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On The Reactionary Side...
Movie Clip
Robert Osborne Intro...
Hosted Intro
Opening, Russia
Movie Clip
My Name Is Theodore...
Movie Clip
Stalin Will Not Fail!...
Movie Clip
Original Trailer
Trailer

ARTICLES
With a nod to Ninotchka (1939), Comrade X (1940) casts Hedy Lamarr as a Moscow streetcar driver who is a devout Communist, and Clark Gable as an American reporter who "liberates" her. Pressured into an agreement to help sneak Lamarr out of Russia, Gable pretends to be a Communist himself and assures her that once in America they can fight for the Soviet cause. After marrying her as the only means of securing her passport, he finds himself falling in love. Before they can flee to America, the couple is arrested by the Soviets and sentenced to death ­ only to find their prison stormed by counter-revolutionaries. Meanwhile, Gable has been selling Lamarr on the virtues of the U.S.: "It's pie a la mode, two-pants suits and the home of the brave, Pike's Peak and Coney Island!" An incongruous romance between Clark Gable and Hedy Lamarr culminates in a Keystone Kops-type chase in army tanks. Walter Reisch won an Oscar® nomination for his original story, which reflects American attitudes about untrustworthy Communists that were about to be changed by World War II as Russia became an important ally of the U.S. The movie's solid supporting cast includes Natasha Lytess, later to gain fame as Marilyn Monroe's acting coach. Comrade X was the second co-starring stint in a row for MGM stars Gable and Lamarr, who had just finished filming Boom Town (1940), with Spencer Tracy and Claudette Colbert. According to Gable biographer Lyn Tornabene, studio head Louis B. Ma...

ARCHIVES
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 Kapralik Trade Ad from the movie 'Comrade X'
Comrade X
Kapralik Trade Ad
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 Scene Stills from the movie 'Comrade X'
Comrade X
Scene Stills

NOTES

Although onscreen credits list George Renavent as Laszlo, the Variety review credits John Picorri with the role. According to a news item in Hollywood Reporter, Herman Mankiewicz was to have written the screenplay for the film, but his participation in the final film cannot be confirmed as he is not credited on screen, in SAB or reviews. The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Screenplay.

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