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Das Haus in der 92. Straße

Originaltitel: The House on 92nd Street
  • 1945
  • 16
  • 1 Std. 28 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,6/10
3459
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Das Haus in der 92. Straße (1945)
Film NoirDramaKriegKriminalitätMysteriumThriller

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuBill Dietrich becomes a double agent for the F.B.I. in a German spy ring.Bill Dietrich becomes a double agent for the F.B.I. in a German spy ring.Bill Dietrich becomes a double agent for the F.B.I. in a German spy ring.

  • Regie
    • Henry Hathaway
  • Drehbuch
    • Barré Lyndon
    • Charles G. Booth
    • John Monks Jr.
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • William Eythe
    • Lloyd Nolan
    • Signe Hasso
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,6/10
    3459
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Henry Hathaway
    • Drehbuch
      • Barré Lyndon
      • Charles G. Booth
      • John Monks Jr.
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • William Eythe
      • Lloyd Nolan
      • Signe Hasso
    • 73Benutzerrezensionen
    • 30Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • 1 Oscar gewonnen
      • 4 wins total

    Fotos30

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    Topbesetzung67

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    William Eythe
    William Eythe
    • Bill Dietrich
    Lloyd Nolan
    Lloyd Nolan
    • Inspector George A. Briggs
    Signe Hasso
    Signe Hasso
    • Elsa Gebhardt
    Gene Lockhart
    Gene Lockhart
    • Charles Ogden Roper
    Leo G. Carroll
    Leo G. Carroll
    • Col. Hammersohn
    Lydia St. Clair
    • Johanna Schmidt
    William Post Jr.
    William Post Jr.
    • Walker
    • (as William Post)
    Harry Bellaver
    Harry Bellaver
    • Max Coburg
    Bruno Wick
    • Adolf Lange
    Harro Meller
    • Conrad Arnulf
    Charles Wagenheim
    Charles Wagenheim
    • Gustav Hausmann
    Alfred Linder
    • Adolf Klein
    Renee Carson
    • Luise Vajda
    William Adams
    William Adams
    • Customs Officer
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Frieda Altman
    • Saboteur
    • (Nicht genannt)
    William Beach
    • Saboteur
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Carl Benson
    • German Spy Trainee
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Hamilton Benz
    • Saboteur
    • (Nicht genannt)
    • Regie
      • Henry Hathaway
    • Drehbuch
      • Barré Lyndon
      • Charles G. Booth
      • John Monks Jr.
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen73

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    7bmacv

    Viewed as a period piece, semi-documentary about Nazi espionage still holds interest

    This is the story of how the FBI supposedly cracked a Nazi espionage ring on the trail of Manhattan Project (the A-Bomb) in the early years of World War II. As a movie, its chief significance is that it kicked off a spate of semi-documentary movies paying tribute to one or another of the U.S. government's law enforcement agencies and celebrating Our Tax Dollars at Work. Such films became a staple of the noir cycle; a few of them even achieved distinction (T-Men, for instance).

    William Eythe, a young American, is recruited by and trained in Germany to be a spy; in fact he works as a double agent for the FBI. The film, shot largely on location, traces the actions of the nest of vipers on New York's upper east side. Their unofficial master seems to be Signe Hasso, under cover of running a chic dress boutique. Her opposite number, who runs Eythe, is Lloyd Nolan (who was to reprise his role as Inspector Briggs in subsequent films).

    The film's period flavor keeps it from seeming too dated, because the spying looks quite primitive to audiences spoiled by James Bond gimmickry and later, even more sophisticated, espionage thrillers. And, from a modern perspective, the smug boastfulness about the Bureau's -- and America's -- infallibility becomes a bit hard to swallow. There's little texture or nuance in the film, but, as a quasi-historical document, it exerts its own fascination.
    6rmax304823

    Classic of the genre.

    It really IS a classic of the genre, but the problem is that the genre itself is so dated as not to be taken seriously anymore. That happens to genres. Would you watch a Western in which the good guy wears a white hat and the bad guy wears a black hat and one "calls the other out" and they have a mano-a-mano shootout in the middle of the dusty street and the good guy wins and gets the girl? I mean, that's asking a lot of a modern audience.

    This film was one of a series of semi-documentaries that came out with the end of the war. Often, as here, Henry Hathaway was the director and the stentorian baritone Reed Hadley was the narrator. I can't vouch for the historical accuracy of the plot, although regardless of the facts I'm sure J. Edgar Hoover was tickled pink when he saw it. Hoover, President-for-Life of the FBI, was a media savvy character. Early in his career he had a skilled partner in Melvin Purvis, the guy who tracked down Dillinger. Such rivalry was not to be tolerated. Purvis's part in the affair, in fact his whole persona, was purged like Akhenaten's until Hoover became the hero. Purvis quit in disgust. Hoover refused to cooperate with Warner's "G-Men" because Jimmy Cagney patronized a saloon, but he gave the FBI's all to this film because the FBI was morally upright and flawless.

    One scene was of particular interest. A real Nazi spy insists on testing the American counterspy's radio set to see if it can actually reach Hamburg. It doesn't. It transmits directly to a nearby FBI station which then relays the information to Germany, in a slightly altered form. The FBI operator hears the Nazi calling. He looks up and says, "That isn't Bill. I know his fist." A "fist" is the particular style that an individual operator uses in sending Morse code. It's about as distinctive as his handwriting. I was a radio operator for a few years in the Coast Guard and had a great fist. Most of the other men at my station set their keys to automatic "fast" so they could sound hot. Only they overreached and wound up sounding jagged and making a lot of errors. I set mine to "slow" and developed a fist that was easy to read and pleasing to listen to in its rhythmic splendor. Two radiomen from a ship visited the station in dress blues one afternoon and asked who "LL" was -- my sign-off letters. They came over to my console and one said, "We just wanted to tell you that it's a pleasure to copy you." The two men shook my hand, the three of us blushed, and they made a hurried exit, because real men don't say things like that to one another.

    I dislike boasts but there are so few things I do well. Oh, yes, the movie. Alas,the conventions of the genre demand that the Nazis be evil in every respect. Worse than that, they're rude. When the American counterspy is introduced to them, they don't even greet him, they just scowl. None of them is in love, none of them has a home, none has a dog or a cat or collects stamps. They sacrifice one another for the cause at the drop of a solecism and -- well, you get the picture. Compare the Nazi spies in Hitchcock's "Notorious."

    The conventions doom the characters as human beings. Loyd Nolan and Signe Hasso are the most watchable, but all of the performances are colorless. Even the hero is dull, despite the danger he often finds himself in.

    It's still an interesting and exciting flick, once you adapt to its weaknesses. Fascinating to see the way in which two-way mirrors are presented as the high-tech novelty they were at the time. And the pre-computer FBI's fingerprint storage -- "Five THOUSAND fingerprints on file!", Hadley announces proudly.

    It's worth catching if it is convenient.
    6secondtake

    Some gripping scenes, some documentary footage, and an up and down patchwork

    The House on 92nd Street (1945)

    Henry Hathaway has directed some great film noirs (Kiss of Death is indisputably great), but he also didn't mind the dull assignment here and there, as in the competent Call Northside 777 and this one, both revealing American crime detection in action. Yes, this is actually well made, but it has a documentary feel that leaves it in a straitjacket as good crime drama. It's strong stuff, and filled with significance, real Nazi activities on U.S. soil leading to the a-bomb. But you'll see, as soon as the familiar narrator starts to explain the events, that it's a formulaic approach.

    To some extent, you can't really watch this without noticing it feels, from the next century (2010 as I write) like propaganda. Not that it isn't honest, it just is filled with uncritical pride. The FBI in particular comes across as flawless and brilliant, and I'm sure it often was, but not quite without complications, nuances, and personal quirks that make the best fiction films take off. This one was made just as World War II was over in Europe, and there was nothing but patriotism in the air, naturally.

    I actually like Leo G. Carroll a lot, and he holds up his scenes well, and Swedish actress Signe Hasso is a surprise, strong and sharp (wait until she takes her wig off and transforms in ten seconds). Much of the movie, especially after the first half hour with all its narration and actual documentary footage, has the feel of any well constructed drama and those are the parts, for me, to hook into. Besides, there is a quality here that's really pretty fun--a glimpse into the attitude of 1945 America that isn't the usual brazen, lonely, taut film noir response. Fiction makes for better movie-going, in this case, but here is a watchable quasi-documentary that holds up pretty well, off and on, if you keep expectations in check.
    harry-76

    Good Period Piece

    The highly gifted natural and trained talent of Lloyd Nolan adorns this story of espionage and counterespionage in the US just prior to and after WWII was declared.

    Playing a key FBI agent, Nolan displays the totally convincing work he rendered throughout his career. He heads a strong cast: Signe Hasso and Leo G. Carroll offer solid performances, and William Ethye is a good leading man.

    Director Henry Hathaway mixes in authentic newsreel footage with care and balance. The result is a well done docudrama of the mid 40s.

    It looks as though 20th Century Fox made a pact with the FBI for this project, with almost the complete Bureau being utilized for the shoot. The films emerges as a supreme tribute to the branch, with Chief Hoover's name frequently in evidence.

    The work technically qualifies as propaganda, in which patriotic appreciation and support for the war effort is forthrightly projected.
    dougdoepke

    A Model of Studio Craftmanship

    Where in the world did they find hawk-nosed, beady-eyed Lydia St. Clair, the German Gestapo agent. One look from her, and I'd spill my guts in a flash. This is her only movie credit, so I'm guessing she had the same effect on the producers. Speaking of producers, Louis De Rochemont and TCF led the docu-drama trend that greatly influenced post-war crime drama. This is an early entry, and as a model of craftsmanship, there's none better, at least in my view. The location photography, FBI footage, and voice-over narration combine seamlessly with the melodramatic elements supposedly based on fact. Credit much of this to director Hathaway, one of Hollywood's supreme craftsmen.

    Sure, the movie sometimes plays like an advertisement for the FBI. But if the data cited is correct, they had a lot to brag about in terms of counter-espionage. Notice, however, no mention is made of the thousands of Japanese-American citizens illegally interned on the West Coast. The Mr. Cristopher charade may be a gimmick, but it does build suspense as we guess the whereabouts of the mastermind. And when the "unveiling" finally comes, I suspect a few 1945 audiences were mildly startled. Seems a stretch to call this a noir since the lighting and atmosphere are naturalistic throughout. Anyway, as a blend of documentary style with story interest, it's hard to beat this tautly efficient little thriller.

    In passing—check out the movie's initial release date, barely a month after the first public disclosure of the A-bomb following Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Looks to me like this required some furious re-writing and maybe some changes in Lockhart's role of research professor. No doubt inclusion of the new weapon was used to sell the film to information hungry audiences.

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    • Wissenswertes
      The movie deals with the theft by German spies of the fictional "Process 97", a secret formula which, the narrator tells us, "was crucial to the development of the atomic bomb." The movie was released on September 10, 1945, only a month after the atomic bombs had been dropped on Japan, and barely a week after Japan's formal surrender. While making the film, the actors and Director Henry Hathaway did not know that the atomic bomb existed, nor that it would be incorporated as a story element in the movie. (None of the actors in the film mentioned the atomic bomb.) However, co-Director and Producer Louis De Rochemont (who produced the "March of Time" newsreel films) and Narrator Reed Hadley were involved in producing government films on the development of the atomic bomb. (Hadley was present at the final test of the bomb in Los Alamos, New Mexico, in July, 1945.) After the bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, Hadley and Screenwriter John Monks, Jr. hastily wrote some additional voice-over narration linking "Process 97" to the atomic bomb, and Rochemont inserted it into the picture in time for the film's quick release.
    • Patzer
      The description of a one-way mirror as an "X-ray" mirror at the beginning is nonsense. A one-way mirror is in fact merely a partially-silvered mirror. It becomes "one-way" by virtue of different lighting on either side - one side dimly lit, the other brightly lit. From the side that's brightly lit, it appears to be a normal mirror because the reflection washes out any light coming through from the dim side. But from within the dim side, everything on the bright side is readily visible because the light coming through predominates over the reflection seen from the dim side.
    • Zitate

      Agent George A. Briggs: We know all about you, Roper. We've traced you to the day you were born. We even know the approximate day you will die.

    • Crazy Credits
      Opening credits are shown as someone flipping through the pages of a file.
    • Verbindungen
      Referenced in 23 Schritte zum Abgrund (1956)
    • Soundtracks
      Tra-La-La-La
      (uncredited)

      Music by Harry Warren

      Played as background music at the talent agent's office

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    FAQ

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 26. Juni 1952 (Westdeutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprachen
      • Englisch
      • Deutsch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • The House on 92nd Street
    • Drehorte
      • Hamburg, Deutschland(second unit)
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Twentieth Century Fox
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    Box Office

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    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 2.500.000 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 28 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Black and White
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.37 : 1

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