In the Crimea, the Reds and the Whites aren't done fighting, and Jeanne discovers that the man she loves is a Bolshevik (when he kills her father). Penniless, she returns to Paris where she works for her uncle. Soon after, her lover Andreas is in France to organize the sailors in Toulon. So also is a thief, traitor, and libertine, Khalibiev, who wants to seduce Jeanne. His schemes, Jeanne and Andreas's naivete, and a lost diamond bring the lovers to the brink of tragedy.
Édith Jéhanne
as Jeanne Ney
Uno Henning
as Andreas Labov
Fritz Rasp
as Khalibiev
Brigitte Helm
as Gabrielle
Sig Arno
as Gaston
Vladimir Sokoloff
as Zacharkiewicz
Margarete Kupfer
as Zimmermädchen
Robert Scholz
as
Hertha von Walther
as Margot
Adolf E. Licho
as Onkel Raymond Ney
Eugen Jensen
as Vater Alfred Ney
Hans Járay
as Emile Poitras