IMDb
6.1 /10
605 votes


Fantasy · Science Fiction · 1932 · 1h 27min
Die Herrin von Atlantis
Two young officers, Saint-Avit and Morhange, get lost in the desert and find themselves prisoners of the beautiful Antinéa, queen of the city of Atlantis. Saint-Avit, blinded by his love for her, obeys her when she orders him to kill his comrade... With L’Atlantide, Pabst offers a psychoanalytic reading of Benoit’s novel, with a dominant female figure who enslaves her lovers before destroying them. The film’s fantasy dimension is disturbing, L’Atlantide bathes in a humid nightmare atmosphere, between the desperate search for a missing friend and the apparitions of an underworld lost in the desert. A long, discursive flashback suggests the Parisian origins of Antinéa, born from the marriage between Clémentine, a pretty, light-thighed French Cancan dancer, and an Arab prince seduced during a theatrical performance. But again, it's impossible to know whether these are the ramblings of an old alcoholic or the strange truth.
Sign in and build your archive. The best notes get written right after the credits roll.
Sign in → top right
Available in United States (data from JustWatch via TMDB · click → opens in provider)
IMDb
6.1 /10
605 votes
Rotten Tomatoes
The tomato isn't ripe
Metacritic took the day off
TMDB
6.4 /10
11 votes
Letterboxd
Letterboxd didn't respond
Weighted average
6.2/10