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IMDbPro

Das dämonische Ich

Originaltitel: Wanted for Murder
  • 1946
  • Approved
  • 1 Std. 44 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,8/10
983
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Derek Farr, Dulcie Gray, and Eric Portman in Das dämonische Ich (1946)
A woman becomes the target of a man who is gradually becoming insane, unable to resist his urge to strangle women to death, but who appears to be purposely leaving pieces of evidence behind.
trailer wiedergeben1:08
1 Video
45 Fotos
DramaKriminalitätThriller

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuA woman becomes the target of a man who is gradually becoming insane, unable to resist his urge to strangle women to death, but who appears to be purposely leaving pieces of evidence behind.A woman becomes the target of a man who is gradually becoming insane, unable to resist his urge to strangle women to death, but who appears to be purposely leaving pieces of evidence behind.A woman becomes the target of a man who is gradually becoming insane, unable to resist his urge to strangle women to death, but who appears to be purposely leaving pieces of evidence behind.

  • Regie
    • Lawrence Huntington
  • Drehbuch
    • Percy Robinson
    • Terence de Marney
    • Emeric Pressburger
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Eric Portman
    • Dulcie Gray
    • Derek Farr
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,8/10
    983
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Lawrence Huntington
    • Drehbuch
      • Percy Robinson
      • Terence de Marney
      • Emeric Pressburger
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Eric Portman
      • Dulcie Gray
      • Derek Farr
    • 31Benutzerrezensionen
    • 9Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:08
    Trailer

    Fotos45

    Poster ansehen
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    Topbesetzung32

    Ändern
    Eric Portman
    Eric Portman
    • Victor James Colebrooke, alias Tom Maren
    Dulcie Gray
    Dulcie Gray
    • Anne Fielding
    Derek Farr
    Derek Farr
    • Jack Williams
    Roland Culver
    Roland Culver
    • Chief Insp. Conway
    Stanley Holloway
    Stanley Holloway
    • Sgt. Sullivan
    Barbara Everest
    Barbara Everest
    • Mrs. Colebrooke
    Bonar Colleano
    Bonar Colleano
    • Cpl. Nick Mappolo
    Jenny Laird
    Jenny Laird
    • Jeannie McLaren
    Kathleen Harrison
    Kathleen Harrison
    • Florrie
    Bill Shine
    Bill Shine
    • Det. Ellis
    Viola Lyel
    Viola Lyel
    • Mabel Cooper
    John Salew
    John Salew
    • Det. Walters
    John Ruddock
    • Glover
    Edna Wood
    • Miss Kemp
    George Carney
    George Carney
    • Boat Rental Agent
    Mary Mackenzie
    • Girl at Fair
    Wilfrid Hyde-White
    Wilfrid Hyde-White
    • Guide in Madame Tussaud's
    • (as Wilfred Hyde White)
    Moira Lister
    Moira Lister
    • Miss Willis
    • Regie
      • Lawrence Huntington
    • Drehbuch
      • Percy Robinson
      • Terence de Marney
      • Emeric Pressburger
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen31

    6,8983
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    8hitchcockthelegend

    Just Call Whitehall 1212

    Wanted for Murder is directed by Lawrence Huntington and adapted to screenplay by Emeric Pressburger, Rodney Ackland, Barbara Everest and Maurice Cowan from the play by Terence De Marney and Percy Robinson. It stars Eric Portman, Dulcie Gray, Derek Farr, Roland Culver and Stanley Holloway. Music is by Mischa Spoliansky and cinematography by Mutz Greenbaum.

    Nifty little thriller noir this, basically it finds Portman as the sinister Victor James Colebrook, a man with murderous instincts born out by bad seed lineage in his family tree. Can intrepid Chief Inspector Conway (Culver) nail his man before he kills yet again? Imperative since Victor has latched onto Anne Fielding (Gray), and although he is in love with her, he doesn't know how long he can contain his blood lust.

    Thought to be influenced by a real life serial killer, Huntington's movie is very Hitchcockian in tone. Story unfolds by night in a London of dimly lighted foggy streets and dense shadowed parks, and by day it's the hustle and bustle of the city that provides a backdrop of false normalcy. As the tormented Victor goes about his way, leading his double life as a cunning member of society who dotes on his mother – and that of a strangler of women – the makers ensure the surroundings suit the persona.

    A chapter of the story set at a carnival pulses with unease, a visit to a wax museum really gets to the heart of the evil, a murder sequence that is off camera strikes all the right terrifying notes, and a quite brilliant passage that sees witnesses come face to face with the killer in Conway's office is superbly performed by all involved. Then there is the finale that plays out at night (naturally) at the Serpentine Lake in Hyde Park. Wonderful!

    Portman (A Canterbury Tale/Dear Murderer) was a British treasure, an actor whose career begs for reappraisal by classic film fans. Here he is right on the money as the complex sociopath who detests what he has become and even dangles clues for the police to follow. Yet he also slips easily into society with a measured calmness that is rather chilling. Portman quite simply is excellent. As are Culver and Holloway as the sort of coppers Britain could do with having more of these days!

    With Pressburger as part of the writing team it's no surprise to find the script tight and the dialogue snappy, Huntington (The Upturned Glass) and Greenbaum (Night and the City) never miss the chance to accentuate the psychological tremors by way of smart visuals, and Spoliansky's music is devilishly spectral like. It probably could have been shorn of ten minutes and the Dulcie Gray/Derek Farr romance gets a little twee at times, but this is well worth checking out and deserves to be better known. 8/10
    6kalbimassey

    Worth hanging around for

    How ironic that Eric Portman's opening volley should be an ill tempered retort to girlfriend, Dulcie Gray for leaving him HANGING about for an hour and a half. Her plausible explanation of a prolonged delay on the Tube failing to quell his ire.

    Portman is Victor Colebrooke, a man not so much haunted, as fully immersed and entirely consumed by the spectre of his deceased father, a notorious hangman in the late Victorian era, for whom job satisfaction was off the scale, as he wallowed in the morbid pleasure of the ultra-brief working relationships he forged with his clients and a sadistic smugness at his prolific turnover. His infamy recognized by a waxwork on display at Madame Tussaud's chamber of horrors in his dishonour.

    Any expectations of a murder mystery, whodunnit, or a final 'Cor, I never thought it were 'im!' are quickly dispelled and if you think for a moment that amorous, affable bus conductor, Derek Farr isn't quite the ticket, he immediately proves to be a fare minded all-round good guy.

    No! 'Wanted for Murder' is a largely grim parable, offset by a couple of surprisingly comic moments, portraying Portman's inherent insanity and morbid passion for killing, targeting young women in London parks after dark, rendering them post dusk no-go areas in the process. Further, he taunts detective Roland Culver with postcards, not of the 'Weather beautiful, wish you were here' variety, but with chilling predictions of where he intends to strike next. Yet, between the lines lurks a cryptic cry for help and a veiled self-loathing.

    'Wanted for Murder' plays out as a sombre depiction of a man imprisoned within himself, enduring a meltdown into murderous madness, and the brittle breakability of the 78 R. P. M. Record: Several smashed accidentally by a gramophone shop manageress and one deliberately in a fit of rage, by Portman. Was it on RCA, Victor?
    10clanciai

    Poor murderer

    This is like a Dostyevsky thriller, you know the murderer from the start, and you have the privilege of together with the script writer gradually intersecting him piece by piece, to get into the very heart of the matter of his complex psychology. Like Raskolnikov, he almost begs to get found out and be delivered, Eric Portman makes a fantastic performance by never sparing the poor murderer his tribulations, who can't help being what he is, he can't explain it and understand it either, and he even prays to God to be set free. The explanations of the malaise "being in the blood" is poor and does not hold. And then there are all the other persons getting involved, his poor mother above all, who never suspects her son to be as affected as his father until it is too late, and his girls, all innocents and suspecting nothing, and then the marvellous police officers, the meticulously methodical Roland Culver deliberately beating about the bush until he at last has evidence, and Stanley Holloway as his second, dutiful to the last. There are others also and precious details, the case about the cigar, the spectacular scenes at the fair and Hyde Park, and the towering thriller of the final settlement, almost reminding of "The Third Man" although being out in the open and in broad daylight. You feel the keen pen of Emeric Pressburger here in almost every detail, the famous partner of Michael Powell, who was the script writer of them and one of the best in film history. To all this comes the haunting melody of Mischa Spoliansky, a Russian composer who had to escape from Russia to Germany to later make his career in England with various film scores, but this could be his very best: actually reminding of Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco's "Capriccio Diabolico" from 1935, expertly performed by Andrès Segovia among others. In brief, this very noir British thriller contains everything you could wish for, while the almost Dostoyeskian psychology is its major treat.
    7stills-6

    Very effective British thriller

    It's all very nicely done. I had barely, if ever, heard of any of the leads in this movie before I saw it. I was expecting a sloppy film noir set in London, but it was a pleasant surprise when the dialogue and the players were as good as they are. The story is tight, mostly, and there is real tension and unexpected humor. Overall, it was very effective.

    I was particularly impressed with Eric Portman as Colebrooke. There was not much of a tradition playing sociopaths at this point in the movies. Of the few that had been portrayed, Cagney in "White Heat", for example, is much more histrionic and obvious than Portman is here.

    I might quibble with some plot points and some really heavy-handed staging, but really this is much like middle Hitchcock without all of the psychological mumbo-jumbo to push it along.
    7Steve-318

    Murderer loose in postwar London in the 40's

    Erudite British effort where the strangler comes off as quite civilized. He's quite the gentleman, really, just has this problem with his hands.

    Really enjoyed Stanley Holloway as the #2-cop on the case. Stanley doesn't break into song but he does provide some comedic relief--subtle stuff, no slapstick.

    You can't help but be fascinated by the many views of London that are pictured (immediately after the war). The buses, street scenes, and various landmarks shown on film tell a story of their own. How times have changed--the record shop scene is a far cry from the rocking London that would follow 20 years later.

    This is well-written (Emeric Pressburger had a hand in that) story with characters that are decidely human, albeit in the English stiff-upper-lip school.

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    • Wissenswertes
      Mary Mackenzie's debut.
    • Patzer
      After a handkerchief is discovered near a murder victim, an inspector from Scotland Yard tries to track down the owner via the laundry mark on it. The next scene shows a commercial laundryman carrying a wicker laundry basket into a home. Outside the home, the laundry basket bears the number "T 31". Upon entering the home the laundry basket bears the number "T 14".
    • Zitate

      Sgt. Sullivan: There's one other thing sir. Course, you can take this for what it's worth.

      Chief Insp. Conway: Yes?

      Sgt. Sullivan: My wife says she's certain there's going to be another murder tonight.

      Chief Insp. Conway: Your wife isn't the strangler by any chance, is she?

      Sgt. Sullivan: Not that I know of sir. Only she's just got a feeling that's all. She's septic. Er - psychic...

    • Crazy Credits
      The cast list in the opening credits finishes with etc. etc.
    • Verbindungen
      Referenced in Dela: Case #30: The Gas Killer (2024)
    • Soundtracks
      A Voice in the Night
      Lyric of Song by Mischa Spoliansky

      Music by Mischa Spoliansky (uncredited)

      Sung by Lizbeth Webb

    Top-Auswahl

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 19. Juli 1950 (Westdeutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigtes Königreich
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Wanted for Murder
    • Drehorte
      • Royal Exchange, Cornhill and Threadneedle Street, City of London, England, Vereinigtes Königreich(Maren buys flowers)
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Marcel Hellman Productions
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    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 44 Min.(104 min)
    • Farbe
      • Black and White
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.37 : 1

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