Abdul the Damned (also known as Abdul Hamid) is a 1935 British drama film directed by Karl Grune and starring Fritz Kortner, Nils Asther and John Stuart. It was made at the British International Pictures studios by Alliance-Capitol Productions. It is set in the Ottoman Empire in the years before the First World War, during the reign of Sultan Abdul Hamid II and the constitutionalist Young Turks who dethroned him.
Sultan Abdul Hamid II is the absolute ruler of the Ottoman Empire in 1908. That same year, the leader of the revolutionary CUP (Young Turks), Hilmi Pasha, returns from exile, threatening the Sultan's rule and the conservative opposition to the CUP. Seeking to please the old despot, the Osmanli chief of police assassinates the leader of the conservative opposition, and makes it look as if a Young Turk committed the crime in order to give the Sultan an excuse for arresting the CUP leadership. Meanwhile, the Sultan becomes infatuated with a visiting Austrian singer. When she rejects his advances, she endangers both herself and her fiancé, a Turkish officer who knows too much about the assassination plot.
Schach borrowed ã15,000 from Westminster Bank to make the film.
The New York Times wrote, "Although the film achieves a few moments of dramatic interestâÂÂchiefly through the performance of the Continental Fritz KortnerâÂÂit is in the main a tedious and uninspired biography, scarred by hypodermic injections of stale melodrama"; whereas Film Weekly found it "magnificently acted by Fritz Kortner. Interesting, impressive and, for the most part, gripping entertainment."