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Collection ID
1155
Director:
Alfred Hitchcock
Starring:
Sylvia Sidney, Oskar Homolka, John Loder, Desmond Tester, Joyce Barbour
Genre:
Drama
Studio:
Gaumont British Picture Corporation
Release date:
1936
Rated:
Not Rated
Language (Country):
English
(UK)
Summary:
Mr. Verloc is part of a gang of foreign saboteurs operating out of London. He manages a small cinema with his wife and her teenage brother as a cover, but they know nothing of his secret. Scotland Yard assign an undercover detective to work at the shop next to the cinema in order to observe the gang.
My Rating:
My Review: Screenplay by too many to mention. Based upon a novel (same name) by Joseph Conrad. Directed by Alfred Hitchcock (Psycho (1960), Vertigo (1958), North by Northwest (1959), The man who knew too much (1934)). Starring Sylvia Sidney, Oskar Homolka, Desmond Tester and others. Here's another Hitchcock film made on the eve / just before WWII. Readying the UK population for war was clearly on Hitchcock's mind as he directed many of the movies from the late 30s into the 40s. This pre-American espionage thriller features a story about terrorism. Called sabotage during the era of this film, this movie tells the tale of foreign agents committing acts of terrorism on British soil. A young American woman moves to England with her German? husband. While she tends to her son, and domestic activities, Mr. Verloc is involved in something nefarious. The movie opens with a London blackout (predating intentional blackouts during Luftwaffe raids). The power plant has been sabotaged with sand. When the foreign agents aren't satisfied with that, they escalate matters, instigating a train station bombing. As the agent prepares to carry out this plan, Scotland Yard is hard at work, trying to break this 'cell' of terrorists. It doesn't take long before they've got their man. There's only one problem. In a panic, this cowardly agent has sent his wife's innocent son out to the train station with an armed bomb under arm. The ending contained some shocking scenes, and an unexpected twist. Classic Hitchcock. Excellent writing (based on a novel), direction and acting (especially that of Silvia Sydney). Unfortunately there were no subtitles, the accents were thick at times, and the sound work was poor. This film hasn't aged well. I give it a 3 out of 5.
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