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IMDbPro

Sabotaje

Título original: Sabotage
  • 1936
  • A
  • 1h 16min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
7,0/10
20 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Oscar Homolka, John Loder, and Sylvia Sidney in Sabotaje (1936)
A Scotland Yard undercover detective is on the trail of a saboteur who is part of a plot to set off a bomb in London. But when the detective's cover is blown, the plot begins to unravel.
Reproducir trailer1:19
1 vídeo
38 imágenes
Psychological ThrillerSpyCrimeThriller

Un detective encubierto sigue la pista de un saboteador que forma parte de un complot para detonar una bomba en Londres. Pero cuando se descubre la tapadera del detective, la trama comienza ... Leer todoUn detective encubierto sigue la pista de un saboteador que forma parte de un complot para detonar una bomba en Londres. Pero cuando se descubre la tapadera del detective, la trama comienza a desmoronarse.Un detective encubierto sigue la pista de un saboteador que forma parte de un complot para detonar una bomba en Londres. Pero cuando se descubre la tapadera del detective, la trama comienza a desmoronarse.

  • Dirección
    • Alfred Hitchcock
  • Guión
    • Joseph Conrad
    • Charles Bennett
    • Ian Hay
  • Reparto principal
    • Sylvia Sidney
    • Oscar Homolka
    • Desmond Tester
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    7,0/10
    20 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Alfred Hitchcock
    • Guión
      • Joseph Conrad
      • Charles Bennett
      • Ian Hay
    • Reparto principal
      • Sylvia Sidney
      • Oscar Homolka
      • Desmond Tester
    • 127Reseñas de usuarios
    • 66Reseñas de críticos
    • 85Metapuntuación
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • Vídeos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:19
    Trailer

    Imágenes37

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    + 32
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    Reparto principal26

    Editar
    Sylvia Sidney
    Sylvia Sidney
    • Mrs. Verloc
    • (as Sylvia Sydney)
    Oscar Homolka
    Oscar Homolka
    • Karl Verloc--Her Husband
    Desmond Tester
    Desmond Tester
    • Stevie
    John Loder
    John Loder
    • Detective Sgt. Ted Spencer
    Joyce Barbour
    Joyce Barbour
    • Renee
    Matthew Boulton
    Matthew Boulton
    • Superintendent Talbot
    S.J. Warmington
    S.J. Warmington
    • Hollingshead
    William Dewhurst
    William Dewhurst
    • The Professor
    Pamela Bevan
    • Miss Chatham's Daughter
    • (sin acreditar)
    Peter Bull
    Peter Bull
    • Michaelis - Conspirator
    • (sin acreditar)
    Albert Chevalier
    • Cinema Commissioner
    • (sin acreditar)
    Clare Greet
    Clare Greet
    • Mrs. Jones - Cook
    • (sin acreditar)
    Charles Hawtrey
    Charles Hawtrey
    • Studious Youth at the Aquarium
    • (sin acreditar)
    Alfred Hitchcock
    Alfred Hitchcock
    • Man Walking Past the Cinema as the Light Is Renewed
    • (sin acreditar)
    Martita Hunt
    Martita Hunt
    • Miss Chatman - The Professor's Daughter
    • (sin acreditar)
    Mike Johnson
    • Member of Cinema Crowd
    • (sin acreditar)
    J. Hubert Leslie
    J. Hubert Leslie
    • Conspirator
    • (sin acreditar)
    Aubrey Mather
    Aubrey Mather
    • W. Brown & Sons Greengrocer
    • (sin acreditar)
    • Dirección
      • Alfred Hitchcock
    • Guión
      • Joseph Conrad
      • Charles Bennett
      • Ian Hay
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios127

    7,019.9K
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    Reseñas destacadas

    7Sylviastel

    Those Magnificent Sad Eyes!

    Sir Alfred Hitchcock adapted James Conrad's story, "The Secret Agent," into one of better known films. This film is short but not sweet. Sylvia Sidney is magnificent in the leading role as Mrs Verloc. Oscar Homolka plays her husband. They run the Bijou movie house in London, England before Word War II. Her husband is up to something but she doesn't know what. The red flag is raised when the theater loses power and patrons want refunds. Sidney was so young and her eyes could have earned an Academy Award nomination. Sidney supposedly had the saddest eyes in Hollywood but I disagree. Her eyes alone were worth watching. This film is a must for Hitchcock historians and fans alike.
    10krorie

    Sabotage holds up much better than some of Hitchcock's later films

    What an opening. The power goes off all over London as the camera gives the viewer a sweeping panorama of the situation, light, shadow, blackness, panning throughout the city with emphasis on historical sites. Then one word utterances from several different persons in charge of keeping the power up and running. This beginning grabs the audience's attention better than any other film this side of "The Letter" and Hitchcock's own "Rebecca." But unlike "The Letter" where the opening is the high point of the entire film, "Sabotage" keeps getting better and better. The opening is truly just the beginning of a cinema masterpiece. Hitchcock uses old film techniques such as cross cutting in novel ways. One of the best scenes takes place in a zoo aquarium where water creatures are compared with the human creature. Listen to the dialog between the two saboteurs as the camera zooms in on the sea turtles. Later the bomber thinks of the fish swimming in the tank and then sees motor cars filled with passengers speeding along the streets. An explosion. Suddenly the fish in the tank again flash through the bomber's head. To savor this splendid moment of cinematic brilliance, the viewer may need to zip back and watch and listen as the scene is repeated.

    What a wonderful acting job Sylvia Sidney does. Hitchcock used all his influence and bargaining power to have Sidney play the part. Unfortunately Hitchcock and Sidney did not jell. Their personalities clashed. So the gifted actress refused to have anything else to do with the masterful director. Such a great loss for each.

    The way Hitchcock handles the delicate situation involving the cute boy, Mrs. Verloc's (Sylvia Sidney)little brother, riding the bus with a time bomb in a package under one arm while petting a fluffy puppy with his free hand is necessary for what happens at the end of the film. For once, however, Hitchcock misread his movie patrons who were outraged. Never again would he make a similar mistake.

    An interesting feature of this Hitchcock outing is a cinema owned by the bomber (Oskar Homolka) and his wife (Sidney) where clandestine meetings among the saboteurs occur. Several features are shown in the background from time to time during the film but one stands out, "Who Killed Cock Robin," a Disney short from 1935 featuring a parody of Mae West among others. Hitchcock skillfully blends the clip from "Cock Robin" into his story of "Sabotage." Mrs. Verloc deeply depressed and confused following her brother's death hears the laughter coming from the audience. She sits down and joins in with the gaiety. When the arrow is loosed and strikes poor Cock Robin, the laughter on her face changes to an expression of agony and terror. Reality replaces fantasy and make believe. Now she fully realizes what a monster her husband truly is, not the noble sensitive caring man of her dreams. One is reminded how a later director/writer Preston Sturges would use a similar technique with a Mickey Mouse cartoon in his classic "Sullivan's Travels."

    There is also a clear message by Hitchcock on sabotage, today terrorism; those so-called martyrs for a cause are in reality misguided devils who end up killing the innocent and helpless instead of the ones their feeble minds believe to be the deceivers and exploiters of the human race.
    Snow Leopard

    Tense, Atmospheric Thriller

    "Sabotage" is one of Alfred Hitchcock's least known features, but it is part of a string of fine films he made during his last few years in England, and is well worth watching for any Hitchcock or thriller fan. The picture is based on a classic novel by the great Polish-English writer Joseph Conrad.

    This is a tense, atmospheric thriller, without much humor. It is more like "Vertigo", "I Confess", or "The Birds" than "North By Northwest" or "The 39 Steps". Instead of humor, Hitchcock concentrates this time on carefully constructing the world of the Verlocs, the family at the center of the film. The setting, in a movie theater where the family works and lives, is an important part of the themes and questions explored in the film.

    The characters are constantly walking in and out of the theater while movies are in progress, or discussing the movies being shown as they go about the main actions of the (actual) film. The obvious themes of appearance and reality parallel the lives of the Verloc family, and especially Mr. Verloc (Oskar Homolka) whom we know from the beginning to be a terrorist, albeit an amateurish one, and not the mild-mannered family man he appears to be. The settings of Verloc's meeting with his co-conspirators, an aquarium and a bird shop, are also carefully chosen to demonstrate the contrast between the everyday appearance of the terrorists and their actual agendas. Besides the obvious implication that such persons may be those we would not suspect, there is also the strong suggestion that these conspirators do not themselves realize the serious nature of the game they are playing. Certainly Verloc himself quickly realizes that he is in over his head, and he tries desperately to get out of the fearsome responsibilities he has accepted.

    Hitchcock buffs will enjoy watching the film repeatedly to catch all of the carefully crafted detail, and to enjoy the trademark Hitchcock touches. There are two particularly riveting sequences. One occurs when Verloc sends his wife's young, unsuspecting brother on a dangerous errand, leading to a sequence of excruciating tension. Hitchcock later said he should have ended the sequence differently, and many viewers might agree, but what happens is in keeping with the themes and plot of the movie, and the suspense sequence is also masterfully done. Also well-known from "Sabotage" is the sequence when Mrs. Verloc (Sylvia Sidney) learns the truth about her husband's activities, and the awful consequences of his latest plot. There is first a touching sequence in the theater, when the Disney movie playing on the screen first provokes Mrs. Verloc to involuntary laughter, then to deepened sadness when it too closely parallels her own experience. Then there is a tense, famous scene at the dinner table, filmed as an absolutely masterful montage by Hitchcock.

    These scenes, and the finely crafted atmosphere of "Sabotage", make it worthwhile despite a few small faults, and despite the possibility that many viewers will not be comfortable with some of the plot developments. Watch it at least once if you are a Hitchcock fan, or if you like spy stories or thrillers.
    8slokes

    Modern Cinema Began At 1:46

    A boy, an old lady, and a puppy on a bus. What could possibly be a sweeter film scene? Well, that is unless you're Alfred Hitchcock and the film is "Sabotage," in which case you get a trifecta of quite a different sort.

    Playing with the rules was Hitchcock's forte, but never again until "Psycho" would he do so with the cold brilliance on display here. Unlike "Psycho," which hasn't dated a month since its 1960 release, "Sabotage" doesn't for a moment feel like it was made any later than 1936, in part because of its fuzzy sound quality (maybe just the versions I've seen) and in part because it's a very static film.

    That's not to say "Sabotage" isn't good. In fact, it's brilliant. Adapted from the Joseph Conrad novel "The Secret Agent" but markedly better both in terms of its linear treatment of the thin central story and its sharper, more measured ending, "Sabotage" introduces us to Mr. Verloc (Oskar Homolka), the owner of a London cinema who sidelines as a secret agent for a mysterious foreign power, "the people you and I will never catch" as one policeman tells another. After causing a power outage that produces laughter rather than the desired fear, Verloc is assigned a more deadly job, to cause an explosion in Piccadilly Circus, "the center of the world," as Verloc's controller calls it.

    It's impossible to watch the film now without thinking of 9/11 or the London subway bombings, a world of murderous, anarchic terrorism Conrad's novel and Hitchcock's film anticipated without quite comprehending. The film seems to stumble on offering a coherent "why," perhaps because there isn't one, then or now. But echoing a central point in Conrad's novel, "Sabotage" shows the terrorists' greatest fear is not retribution but indifference. "London must not laugh" is the order given to Verloc.

    As played by Homolka with sleepy nuance, Verloc isn't quite a villain, just a weak, lazy man of no moral fiber who objects at the thought of murder but decides to go through with it in order to be paid. Sgt. Spencer of Scotland Yard is hot on Verloc's trail, but he's not exactly a hero, a bit of a bumbler rather who fancies Verloc's wife. Mrs. Verloc, played by screen vet Sylvia Sidney (she was the case worker helping the Maitlands in the afterlife in "Beetle Juice" 52 years later) is the closest we have to a rooting interest, though her concern seems less with the husband or the policeman who woos her than her little brother, Stevie (Desmond Tester).

    Hitchcock's direction offers a little of the comic relief more prominent in his other films, and some arresting visuals for their time, especially that of a fish tank which morphs into a London street under attack. There's a very involving scene where a devastated Mrs. Verloc is reduced to tearful laughter by a Disney cartoon. (Verloc's owning a cinema may be a comment on the deceptively transformative power of cinema, or a wink in the direction of his sideline activity in the novel, selling Edwardian porn.) Mostly "Sabotage" is a film that grabs you by the throat and never lets go, making its 80-minute running time feel like forever going by in an instant.

    It all comes down to the scene on the bus. Hitchcock apparently believed it was the biggest mistake in his career. It may have killed enthusiasm for "Sabotage," but it made clear to filmgoers that all bets were off as far as this young director was concerned. From then on, cliffhangers would be invested with a certain added dread that would make their resolutions seem less pat, and the movie thriller would be that much more thrilling. It took guts to make a film like that.
    9aimless-46

    A Great Sylvia Sidney Vehicle (before "Beetlejuice")

    Like most Hitchcock films, "Sabotage" is a great thriller directed with a fluid, self-assured style. But given its thriller genre what makes "Sabotage" unique is that moments into the movie we know the identity of the saboteur, we know who is the undercover detective, and we know that the police have all but solved the case. So Hitchcock's suspense must come from somewhere else and in the meantime he must entertain us with character development. And that task falls to his heroine. Hitchcock had an uncanny ability to cast actresses who were a perfect fit (at that exact point of their career) to play a particular heroine. Fortunately he again makes the right choice and we are treated to a fine performance from Sylvia Sidney (imagine an expressive Sasha Cohen without ice skates).

    The film is essentially a Sylvia Sidney vehicle as she plays a woman who slowly realizes that her husband is a monster. She is a young American woman who married an older European (nationality unknown) man who apparently showed kindness to her and her young brother Stevie (played by Desmond Tester) when they were down on their luck. They moved to London to run the Bijou, a struggling movie house.

    Among the notable scenes is the meeting between Sidney's husband (played by Oskar Homolka) and a spy contact at the London aquarium; to the backdrop of a huge turtle swimming in an illuminated tank. The tank cross-dissolves into Piccadilly Circus as it is demolished in his imagination.

    Another is late in the film when Sidney sits in the theater in numb shock, watching a Disney cartoon ( ( "Who Killed Cock Robin ?" )). There is not a word of dialogue but her eyes and expressions subtly convey an emotional cavalcade of stunned realization, immense sadness, and barely suppressed hysteria that will stay in your memory forever. It is a rare example of the visual power of film and an illustration of what acting for the camera is all about.

    And perhaps most amazing is the long and unbearably suspenseful journey of young brother Stevie across London, unaware that he's carrying a ticking time bomb.

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    Argumento

    Editar

    ¿Sabías que...?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Based on Joseph Conrad's novel "The Secret Agent", this sports a different title, as Sir Alfred Hitchcock's previous movie was called El agente secreto (1936), which was based on stories by W. Somerset Maugham.
    • Pifias
      The London Underground and tram lines had their own power supplies, both separate from the public system. A single power station failure could not affect all three.
    • Citas

      Ted Spencer: [trying to calm crowd down demanding their money back after a power outage] It's an act of God, I tell you!

      Member of Cinema Crowd: And what do you call an act of God?

      Ted Spencer: I call your face one, and you won't get your money back on that.

    • Créditos adicionales
      Opening credits are shown with a background of a dictionary page open to the definition of "Sabotage".
    • Conexiones
      Featured in Tensa espera (1994)
    • Banda sonora
      Love's Old Sweet Song (Just a Song At Twilight)
      (1884) (uncredited)

      Music by J.L. Molloy

      Lyrics by G. Clifton Bingham

      Sung a cappella by a man lighting candles

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    Preguntas frecuentes18

    • How long is Sabotage?Con tecnología de Alexa
    • Was "Sabotage" remade as "Saboteur"?
    • Why are the picture and sound so bad?
    • Is this film really in the public domain?

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 8 de febrero de 1937 (Reino Unido)
    • País de origen
      • Reino Unido
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • Sabotage
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • Gainsborough Studios, Shepherd's Bush, Londres, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(Studio)
    • Empresa productora
      • Gaumont British Picture Corporation
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Recaudación en todo el mundo
      • 721 US$
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    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Duración
      1 hora 16 minutos
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.37 : 1

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