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5,4/10
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IHRE BEWERTUNG
Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuWhen his sister is arrested in Denmark for murder, American cop Mike Brent aids Danish police with the case and stumbles upon a currency counterfeiting ring.When his sister is arrested in Denmark for murder, American cop Mike Brent aids Danish police with the case and stumbles upon a currency counterfeiting ring.When his sister is arrested in Denmark for murder, American cop Mike Brent aids Danish police with the case and stumbles upon a currency counterfeiting ring.
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Very satisfying American Noir shot in Denmark in the late 1950s. Many of the exteriors were clearly shot on location and make very good, atmospheric use of the city. The interior set pieces, however, are where the film really separates itself from the standard "Noir look". Noir had always been influenced, one might even say descended from, German Expressionism, but the set pieces and lighting here are almost Caligari like, the characters moving through dark rooms like wraiths.
The film culminates with a spectacular chase scene that makes extensive and impressive use of helicopter shots, perhaps the most ambitious use of such angles since Nick Ray's innovative "They Live by Night", released only a few short years before this film.
This movie strikes me as almost unwittingly feminist. The much slapped around and manipulated female characters might be "bad women", but unlike true femme fatales they're not pulling any strings. These are active, if not entirely willing, participants in an amoral, patriarchal game.
The film culminates with a spectacular chase scene that makes extensive and impressive use of helicopter shots, perhaps the most ambitious use of such angles since Nick Ray's innovative "They Live by Night", released only a few short years before this film.
This movie strikes me as almost unwittingly feminist. The much slapped around and manipulated female characters might be "bad women", but unlike true femme fatales they're not pulling any strings. These are active, if not entirely willing, participants in an amoral, patriarchal game.
There's something extremely rotten in Denmark, and as a Late Film Noir, it's actually a few rotten things and they're people, in this case counterfeiters in André De Toth's jazz-soaked, hard-edge HIDDEN FEAR, where John Payne isn't a Wrong Man but his sister could very well be a Wrong Dame...
So it's up to her tall, tough, distant, moody, gritty-handsome, totally indifferent cop brother to figure things out...
Even if he knows his little sister's prone to trouble wherever she winds up, and might not be so innocent, given the company she kept, which gives his mission a more ambiguous edge...
Making him a complete stranger, lost and aloof on foreign soil that is hardly New York's, Chicago's or Los Angeles's shadowy urban landscape...
From the Danish city lined with neat looking apartment buildings in an antique, dollhouse fashion to the sparse waterfront boatyard, director Toth makes such ample use of the country's genuine exterior, even the studio-shots within the usual dark atmospheric nightclubs or restaurant feels like a far away place...
As a (Late) Noir, HIDDEN has a more suspenseful, edgy title than premise and turnout. There's not that many dark moments and yet the pace is brisk (Payne climbing across a titled apartment building roof is a standout). And the story can be confusing unless you pay very close attention to expository detail...
His sister's charged with murder and upon investigation her deceased boyfriend's crowd are deadly counterfeiters slowly crawling out from the shadowy woodwork. That's the baseline...
And once things are more clear, the locale-to-locale investigation is extremely engrossing, scored with vibrant beatnik jazz: A kind of swinging bop sound, and even at times providing a flaunting horn like the future James Bond films...
Also, Payne has that smooth spy ala 007 aura more than a tough cop. And like Bond, he's hardly alone (he even owned the rights to the Ian Fleming novel MOONRAKER for a while)...
Our subtle, local nice girl is played by an extremely beautiful Anne Neyland, who's far more than eye-candy with eyes that really pierce into the men she's speaking to, while talking or listening, while her chemistry with Payne is genuine and sexy despite their lack of physicality, taking away from everything else...
After a little while you might ask yourself: What Murder? For HIDDEN FEAR is a movie that's even better (and deeper) than its often meandering plot that takes second-fiddle to the characters on board: Instead of wielding a backstabbing last-minute gun, her voluptuous body and full-lips makes for a dame the bad guys want instead of the usual vice-versa...
Meanwhile, the counterfeiters are led by a former war hero Alexander Knox (resembling James Mason) who owns a small yacht that's a pivotal location...
When Payne's Mike is trapped inside, surreal music is heard, sounding like an underwater funhouse ride: subtle, softly strange, awkward and eerie, lending a KISS ME DEADLY vibe...
In fact the entire journey is also somewhat Mike Hammer-like, and Payne would have been fantastic playing him: Only there's no slow-burn, twisty conclusion as things shape-up with an action genre helicopter-upon-car-upon-motorcycle chase...
And although it can be convoluted, FEAR provides a cool dose of thrilling entertainment.
So it's up to her tall, tough, distant, moody, gritty-handsome, totally indifferent cop brother to figure things out...
Even if he knows his little sister's prone to trouble wherever she winds up, and might not be so innocent, given the company she kept, which gives his mission a more ambiguous edge...
Making him a complete stranger, lost and aloof on foreign soil that is hardly New York's, Chicago's or Los Angeles's shadowy urban landscape...
From the Danish city lined with neat looking apartment buildings in an antique, dollhouse fashion to the sparse waterfront boatyard, director Toth makes such ample use of the country's genuine exterior, even the studio-shots within the usual dark atmospheric nightclubs or restaurant feels like a far away place...
As a (Late) Noir, HIDDEN has a more suspenseful, edgy title than premise and turnout. There's not that many dark moments and yet the pace is brisk (Payne climbing across a titled apartment building roof is a standout). And the story can be confusing unless you pay very close attention to expository detail...
His sister's charged with murder and upon investigation her deceased boyfriend's crowd are deadly counterfeiters slowly crawling out from the shadowy woodwork. That's the baseline...
And once things are more clear, the locale-to-locale investigation is extremely engrossing, scored with vibrant beatnik jazz: A kind of swinging bop sound, and even at times providing a flaunting horn like the future James Bond films...
Also, Payne has that smooth spy ala 007 aura more than a tough cop. And like Bond, he's hardly alone (he even owned the rights to the Ian Fleming novel MOONRAKER for a while)...
Our subtle, local nice girl is played by an extremely beautiful Anne Neyland, who's far more than eye-candy with eyes that really pierce into the men she's speaking to, while talking or listening, while her chemistry with Payne is genuine and sexy despite their lack of physicality, taking away from everything else...
After a little while you might ask yourself: What Murder? For HIDDEN FEAR is a movie that's even better (and deeper) than its often meandering plot that takes second-fiddle to the characters on board: Instead of wielding a backstabbing last-minute gun, her voluptuous body and full-lips makes for a dame the bad guys want instead of the usual vice-versa...
Meanwhile, the counterfeiters are led by a former war hero Alexander Knox (resembling James Mason) who owns a small yacht that's a pivotal location...
When Payne's Mike is trapped inside, surreal music is heard, sounding like an underwater funhouse ride: subtle, softly strange, awkward and eerie, lending a KISS ME DEADLY vibe...
In fact the entire journey is also somewhat Mike Hammer-like, and Payne would have been fantastic playing him: Only there's no slow-burn, twisty conclusion as things shape-up with an action genre helicopter-upon-car-upon-motorcycle chase...
And although it can be convoluted, FEAR provides a cool dose of thrilling entertainment.
Natalie Norwick is arrested for murder in Denmark. This makes her brother, cop John Payne fly over. It turns out to be not a simple murder, but a matter linked to a counterfeiting ring that is being controlled by Alexander Payne and Conrad Nagel -- the latter without a toupee.
It's one of those tough guy 'tec movies in which the hero -- and Miss Norwick -- is knocked out at least occasionally, and yet survives to win the day, amidst betrayal, car bombs, and such issues. Director Andre de Toth was clearly given a B movie script, and somehow stretched the budget to shoot in Denmark and somehow include a few interesting shots along the way. Payne does a decent job, yet as with so many of his leading roles, I am struck with the conviction that any of a dozen other actors could have done as much. He would not appear on the big screen again for more than a decade.
It's one of those tough guy 'tec movies in which the hero -- and Miss Norwick -- is knocked out at least occasionally, and yet survives to win the day, amidst betrayal, car bombs, and such issues. Director Andre de Toth was clearly given a B movie script, and somehow stretched the budget to shoot in Denmark and somehow include a few interesting shots along the way. Payne does a decent job, yet as with so many of his leading roles, I am struck with the conviction that any of a dozen other actors could have done as much. He would not appear on the big screen again for more than a decade.
I haver never seen an American film noir shot in Danemark before. That's really the first time.
The story itself offers no great surprises. Payne plays an American cop who tries to clear his sister of a murder charge. He has to fight against counterfeiters. I must admit that we have already seen this before, a thousand times. Especially Payne who is as hard boiled as ever.
But it's a tough thriller, no boring at all with, at the end, a good chase through the country side around Copenhagen.
A rare Andre de Toth movie that deserves to be discovered.
The story itself offers no great surprises. Payne plays an American cop who tries to clear his sister of a murder charge. He has to fight against counterfeiters. I must admit that we have already seen this before, a thousand times. Especially Payne who is as hard boiled as ever.
But it's a tough thriller, no boring at all with, at the end, a good chase through the country side around Copenhagen.
A rare Andre de Toth movie that deserves to be discovered.
Filmed in Copenhagen, "Hidden Fear" is a 1957 film starring John Payne, Conrad Nagel, and Alexander Knox. It was directed by Andre de Toth, who had seen better days.
Payne loved playing tough guys and did a few of this type of film. This was his last before going into television work.
He plays Mike Brent, who comes to Copenhagen because his sister is in prison for murdering her boyfriend Tony Martinelli. She swears she didn't do it.
In trying to find the killer, Mike stumbles across a counterfeit currency ring. I was a little confused as to where this money ended up. I also don't actually know who killed Martinelli. We do know they were looking for something as Mike's hotel room and Martinelli's apartment were both trashed.
There was a lot of punching and knocking people over the head - I'm surprised no one wound up with brain damage.
It's sad in a way to see people in this who were former stars in other eras - Nagel way back in the '20s and early '30s, Payne, of course, and Knox who wasn't a huge star but played leads in films.
I suppose back then it was a natural progression, particularly in the case of Knox and Nagel, to turn to character roles. Nowadays it seems as though male stars stay on top longer.
Really didn't care for it and there's some poetry or some sort of recitation at the end that seemed out of place.
Payne loved playing tough guys and did a few of this type of film. This was his last before going into television work.
He plays Mike Brent, who comes to Copenhagen because his sister is in prison for murdering her boyfriend Tony Martinelli. She swears she didn't do it.
In trying to find the killer, Mike stumbles across a counterfeit currency ring. I was a little confused as to where this money ended up. I also don't actually know who killed Martinelli. We do know they were looking for something as Mike's hotel room and Martinelli's apartment were both trashed.
There was a lot of punching and knocking people over the head - I'm surprised no one wound up with brain damage.
It's sad in a way to see people in this who were former stars in other eras - Nagel way back in the '20s and early '30s, Payne, of course, and Knox who wasn't a huge star but played leads in films.
I suppose back then it was a natural progression, particularly in the case of Knox and Nagel, to turn to character roles. Nowadays it seems as though male stars stay on top longer.
Really didn't care for it and there's some poetry or some sort of recitation at the end that seemed out of place.
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- Laufzeit1 Stunde 20 Minuten
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