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Domicilio desconocido

Título original: Address Unknown
  • 1944
  • Approved
  • 1h 15min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.9/10
1.3 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Paul Lukas and K.T. Stevens in Domicilio desconocido (1944)
Drama

Agrega una trama en tu idiomaA U.S.-based art dealer travels to his former homeland of Germany, where he becomes dangerously susceptible to Nazi propaganda.A U.S.-based art dealer travels to his former homeland of Germany, where he becomes dangerously susceptible to Nazi propaganda.A U.S.-based art dealer travels to his former homeland of Germany, where he becomes dangerously susceptible to Nazi propaganda.

  • Dirección
    • William Cameron Menzies
  • Guionistas
    • Herbert Dalmas
    • Kressmann Taylor
    • Lester Cole
  • Elenco
    • Paul Lukas
    • Mady Christians
    • Morris Carnovsky
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    6.9/10
    1.3 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • William Cameron Menzies
    • Guionistas
      • Herbert Dalmas
      • Kressmann Taylor
      • Lester Cole
    • Elenco
      • Paul Lukas
      • Mady Christians
      • Morris Carnovsky
    • 30Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 15Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Nominado a 2 premios Óscar
      • 1 premio ganado y 2 nominaciones en total

    Fotos11

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    Elenco principal49

    Editar
    Paul Lukas
    Paul Lukas
    • Martin Schulz
    Mady Christians
    Mady Christians
    • Elsa Schulz
    Morris Carnovsky
    Morris Carnovsky
    • Max Eisenstein
    Carl Esmond
    Carl Esmond
    • Baron von Friesche
    Peter van Eyck
    Peter van Eyck
    • Heinrich Schulz
    K.T. Stevens
    K.T. Stevens
    • Griselle Eisenstein
    Emory Parnell
    Emory Parnell
    • Postman
    Mary Young
    Mary Young
    • Mrs. Delaney
    Frank Faylen
    Frank Faylen
    • Jimmie Blake
    Charles Halton
    Charles Halton
    • Pip-Squeak Who Censors Play
    Erwin Kalser
    Erwin Kalser
    • Stage Director
    Frank Reicher
    Frank Reicher
    • Professor Schmidt
    Dale Cornell
    • Carl Schulz
    Peter Newmeyer
    • Wilhelm Schulz
    Larry Olsen
    Larry Olsen
    • Youngest Schulz Boy
    • (as Larry Joe Olsen)
    Gary Gray
    Gary Gray
    • Hugo Schulz
    Fred Aldrich
    Fred Aldrich
    • Rock-Tossing Rioter
    • (sin créditos)
    Louis V. Arco
    • Nazi Party Member
    • (sin créditos)
    • Dirección
      • William Cameron Menzies
    • Guionistas
      • Herbert Dalmas
      • Kressmann Taylor
      • Lester Cole
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios30

    6.91.2K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    8jellopuke

    tremendous movie about incremental fascism

    This is a must see with all the drama coming from tiny choices that add up and how you can be seduced by evil for nominal reasons. Well worth tracking down.
    7tomsview

    One for the address book

    This is a fascinating movie on a number of levels.

    For anyone who loves the look of films such as "Citizen Kane' or film noir, there is plenty to offer here. The director, William Cameron Menzies, was also a brilliant art director and he went to town on this picture. Just look at the camera work; he and his crew must have shot half the film from a pit in the floor judging from the dramatic angles.

    The film is set a few years before WW2. Martin Schulz (Paul Lucas) and Max Eisenstein (Morris Carnovsky) run a successful art gallery in San Francisco, Both are German immigrants and are close friends. Martin's son, Heinrich, (Peter Van Eyck) who also works in the gallery, plans to marry Giselle Eisenstein, Max's daughter (K.T. Stevens). Max is due to return to Germany with his wife, Elsa (Mady Christians), to expedite the buying for the gallery. At the last minute, Giselle breaks off her engagement to Heinrich, and also decides to go to Germany to further her acting career.

    In Germany, Martin communicates with Max and Heinrich back at the gallery by mail; through his letters they sense that Martin is falling under the spell of the Nazis. Eventually this hurts Martin's relationship with Max, who is a Jew.

    Martin's seduction by the Nazis, and the advantages they offer has similarities to John Halder, Viggo Mortensen's character in the more recent "Good". Both are weak men who are easily led, and both turn their backs on a Jewish friend.

    Much of the plot of "Address Unknown" hangs on the letters that go backward and forward between San Francisco and Germany. As the film goes on, we learn how powerful these communications are, especially with the Nazi censors involved.

    Giselle's Jewish background puts her in jeopardy when she appears in a play. Interestingly, the lines she speaks, which offend the Nazi censors, are actually the words of Jesus from the "Book of Matthew".

    "Address Unknown" has a couple of scenes that really hit home, with one that would have done Val Lewton proud, and has an ending with a twist worthy of an episode of "Alfred Hitchcock Presents".

    Although heavily stylised, the film highlights the persecution of the Jews in Nazi Germany, but "Address Unknown" was made in 1944, and the war didn't end until 1945. Films made during WW2, give an insight into what was influencing audiences at the time. Although the full extent of what had been going on in Germany didn't come to light until after the war, "Address Unknown" shows that the plight of the Jews before and during the war was far from a complete mystery.

    The film is more restrained than some of the more strident films made during WW2, and it's somewhat abstract quality has prevented it dating all that much.
    7AAdaSC

    Censored

    Martin Schulz (Paul Lukas) and Max Eisenstein (Morris Carnovsky) are business partners. Martin moves to Germany with all of his family except for his eldest son Heinrich (Peter van Eyck), who stays behind to look after things in San Francisco with Max. Meanwhile, Max's daughter Griselle (KT Stevens) travels to Germany to become an actress. The families are very close and Heinrich and Griselle have future plans to marry. Once Baron von Friesche (Carl Esmond) appears on the scene, Martin goes through a change and is indoctrinated into the Nazi lifestyle. This means rejecting his Jewish friend, Max, and his friend's daughter Griselle.

    The story develops through letter correspondence between the two friends, Martin and Max. There are several stand out scenes, my favourites being the performance at the theatre when Griselle disobeys the Nazi authorities and the following chase that ensues in order to catch her. The acting is good, particularly from Carl Esmond. You just know that there is a nasty ulterior motive lurking behind everything that he says and does. Once Martin begins to receive coded letters, suspicion is aroused by the German censors and it's a matter of time before something happens to him... There is a twist at the end.
    7blanche-2

    based on a story

    "Address Unknown" is a 1944 film starring Paul Lukas, which is based on a story of the same name by Kressman Taylor. It's directed by William Cameron Menzies, best known as an art director, and also stars Morris Carnovsky, Peter van Eyck, the later blacklisted Mady Christians, and K.T. Stevens.

    The story concerns two German art dealers in San Francisco circa 1932, Martin (Lukas) and Max Eisenstein (Carnovsky). It falls to Martin to return to Germany with his family to buy and ship art work back to the U.S. gallery. With him and the family is also Griselle, Martin's son's (van Eyck) fiancée, who has acting aspirations and wants to work overseas.

    Martin becomes seduced by the "new Germany" under Hitler and becomes friends with a baron (Carl Esmond) who encourages him to break ties with his Jewish partner, which he does. The baron also learns that Griselle, who uses the last name Stone, is Jewish. Griselle has a part in a play, and the Nazis have forbidden certain lines to be spoken from the Beatitudes. Griselle says them anyway, and, outed as a Jew by someone at the performance, she runs for her life. She makes her way to Martin's place, where she is turned away.

    Martin starts to receive letters from Max that are written in obvious code, giving dimensions of Picassos and having certain numbers substituted for numbers previously sent. The baron warns him that sending and receiving codes is illegal. Martin denies that he is receiving coded letters, meanwhile begging Max to stop writing to him.

    The film is very well done in a film noir style, and you can't go wrong visually with Menzies and with Rudy Mate on the camera. The shadows and camera angles are striking, particularly in the play scene and when Martin is alone in his house toward the end of the film. Well worth seeing for the art direction and cinematography alone.

    In the actual story, Martin and Griselle have had an affair previously, and Griselle is actually Max's sister. The joke painting that Martin sends back to San Francisco that Max tries to hide from a customer is actually a Picasso - I'm not sure that was made clear in the film.

    The action in this film, Martin's turning etc., take place seemingly very quickly and don't come off as believably as in the book, which is actually a series of letters. It has been republished, translated into many languages, and also turned into a play and adapted for radio; it was considered very important at the time it was published, so important that it was felt "too strong" to have been written by a woman, so Katherine Taylor used her maiden name instead to get Kressman Taylor.

    The ending pf the film is unexpected. Very suspenseful and absorbing and amazing to look at - with a wonderful performance by Paul Lukas and the rest of the cast - Address Unknown is highly recommended.
    9merrywood

    From an amazing little book

    This movie was made from a tiny, now classic 1938 book by Kressmann Taylor (her full name was Kathrine Kressmann Taylor) that was written in the form of letters only between the two lead characters.

    As such it is not only a brilliantly conceived horror story of how an evil idea poisons a society but how it continues on to destroy life.

    The small book was re-issued in 2001 by Washington Square Press and at this writing currently available. No matter how you reacted to the movie this is a must read. It can be read in a single, short sitting but it packs an incredible wallop. The little story is compared to the best writing of O. Henry for its sly plot twists and lauded by Kurt Vonnegut who compares it to WWII as what Uncle Tom's Cabin was to the Civil War.

    You can then return to the movie and enjoy it at a far deeper and more profound level. Beyond all of that…if Paul Lukas is in a film, any film, you can trust that it is worth watching if only for his performance.

    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que…?

    Editar
    • Trivia
      K.T. Stevens (real name: Gloria Wood) is the daughter of the film's producer, Sam Wood.
    • Errores
      When Griselle first puts her bloody hand on the frame of Schulz's entrance door after he opens up, the right hand is placed at a certain height and angle while the fingers are spread in a certain shape. But in the following cuts, the hand and fingers have constantly changed angles and positions. In addition, the shape of the bloody hand-print left on the door frame after Schulz closes the door does not match the shape and location Griselle originally placed her hand.
    • Citas

      Baron von Friesche: Does he know the conditions he doesn't like? I find that hard to understand. I myself would hesitate to form conclusions without firsthand evidence. You must set him right. I suppose it isn't easy for a foreigner to understand the agonies our people have suffered since the Treaty of Versailles. What years of less and less bread, of leaner bodies, of the end of hope...

      [pauses to offer Herr Schulz a cigarette]

      Martin Schulz: [accepting a cigarette] Oh, thank you.

      Baron von Friesche: The quicksand of despair held us. Then just before we died, a man came and pulled us out.

      Baron von Friesche: [turning to Herr Professor] You are a native of Munich, Herr Professor?

      Professor Schmidt: Well, uh...

      Baron von Friesche: You have *witnessed* this deliverance.

      Professor Schmidt: If it *is* a deliverance...

      Baron von Friesche: [turning to Herr Schulz] You know, there's a surge, my friend. A surge. Our whole despair has been thrown aside like a forgotten coat. No longer do we wrap ourselves in shame.

      Baron von Friesche: [turning to Herr Professor] What can be wrong about a man who affects people so?

      Professor Schmidt: When people are hungry, they don't care *what* kind of a man it is who gives them bread.

    • Créditos curiosos
      The final fade-out is a closeup of the returned letter, specifically the "Address Unknown" stamped in English. It forms an end title card, which was itself unusual for its time.

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    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 31 de agosto de 1944 (México)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idiomas
      • Inglés
      • Alemán
    • También se conoce como
      • Address Unknown
    • Productora
      • Columbia Pictures
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      1 hora 15 minutos
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.37 : 1

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