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Fuite dans la brume

Titre original : Escape in the Fog
  • 1945
  • Approved
  • 1h 3min
NOTE IMDb
5,9/10
1,2 k
MA NOTE
Nina Foch, Ernie Adams, Ivan Triesault, and William Wright in Fuite dans la brume (1945)
AventureDrameMystèreRomanceThrillerFilm noir

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueDuring WW2, an army nurse on R&R in San Francisco has a premonition about witnessing a murder attempt against a G-man by Nazi agents.During WW2, an army nurse on R&R in San Francisco has a premonition about witnessing a murder attempt against a G-man by Nazi agents.During WW2, an army nurse on R&R in San Francisco has a premonition about witnessing a murder attempt against a G-man by Nazi agents.

  • Réalisation
    • Budd Boetticher
  • Scénario
    • Aubrey Wisberg
  • Casting principal
    • Otto Kruger
    • Nina Foch
    • William Wright
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    5,9/10
    1,2 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Budd Boetticher
    • Scénario
      • Aubrey Wisberg
    • Casting principal
      • Otto Kruger
      • Nina Foch
      • William Wright
    • 28avis d'utilisateurs
    • 26avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Photos39

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    Rôles principaux34

    Modifier
    Otto Kruger
    Otto Kruger
    • Paul Devon
    Nina Foch
    Nina Foch
    • Eileen Carr
    William Wright
    William Wright
    • Barry Malcolm
    Konstantin Shayne
    Konstantin Shayne
    • Schiller
    Ivan Triesault
    Ivan Triesault
    • Hausmer - Schiller's Henchman
    Ernie Adams
    Ernie Adams
    • George Smith
    Jessie Arnold
    Jessie Arnold
    • Woman at Accident
    • (non crédité)
    Mary Chan
    • Pedestrian
    • (non crédité)
    Chin Kuang Chow
    • Chinese Boy
    • (non crédité)
    Edmund Cobb
    Edmund Cobb
    • Detective
    • (non crédité)
    Heinie Conklin
    Heinie Conklin
    • Accident Witness
    • (non crédité)
    Noel Cravat
    Noel Cravat
    • Kolb - Henchman
    • (non crédité)
    Leslie Denison
    Leslie Denison
    • Hilary Gale
    • (non crédité)
    Tom Dillon
    Tom Dillon
    • Lieutenant Commander
    • (non crédité)
    Ralph Dunn
    Ralph Dunn
    • Police Desk Sergeant
    • (non crédité)
    John Elliott
    John Elliott
    • Thomas - Butler
    • (non crédité)
    Wing Foo
    • Chang Yong
    • (non crédité)
    Harrison Greene
    • Mr. Boggs
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Budd Boetticher
    • Scénario
      • Aubrey Wisberg
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs28

    5,91.2K
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    Avis à la une

    6wes-connors

    Dream Girl

    On a foggy San Francisco night, dreamy Nina Foch (as Eileen Carr) takes a melancholy walk on the Golden Gate Bridge. The beautiful young woman is suddenly witness to a terrifying confrontation. Apparently, it ends with a murder, but Ms. Foch wakes up just before the deadly knife takes its final plunge. Fortunately, it was only a dream. Unfortunately, it begins to come true. Foch's wakening scream draws the attention of a man in the inn where she is staying. He looks exactly like the victim, William Wright (as Barry Malcolm), from her dream. Foch has never met the man before he appeared in her nightmare. He's a spy for the US, soon to receive a summons from agent Otto Kruger (as Paul Devon). After showing a romantic interest in Foch, Mr. Wright must deliver a top secret packet to Hong Kong...

    With a skillfully conceived story by Aubrey Wisberg, "Escape in the Fog" is an entertaining spy thriller. Director Budd Boetticher gets attention with the nightmarish opening and Foch delivers a fine characterization. On the downside, her romance with Mr. Wright is not initially believable; perhaps, if the actors had more quality time, the coupling would click. Most interesting is the fact that Foch's character has a supernatural power (seeing future events in her dreams). The explanation appears to be post-traumatic stress suffered during her stint as a nurse in World War II. Although this aspect of Foch's character is dispensed with early, she maintains interest. Watch for young starlet Shelley Winters as a hotel taxi driver and veteran D.W. Griffith player and "Tarzan" portrayer Elmo Lincoln as a lawman.

    ****** Escape in the Fog (1945/04/05) Budd Boetticher ~ Nina Foch, William Wright, Otto Kruger, Konstantin Shayne
    6goblinhairedguy

    quintessential Columbia B

    A woman dreams of a man being murdered, and later she experiences the scene in real life. Before he made his name with the Ranown series of Westerns, Boetticher churned out a skein of low-budget programmers for Columbia and Monogram, many of them well above average. This mystery, while no masterpiece, nicely illustrates what Andrew Sarris called "the beatitude of the Bs". With typical B movie non-logic, the intriguing dream-coming-true angle is taken at face value and never explained. There are a couple of clever escape scenes, and the stylish 40s wardrobe (wide lapels, pin-striped suits, floppy hats) rivals the sartorial splendor of a Hawks movie. Second-string stalwart Nina Foch, more alluring than usual, gives another intelligent performance despite the plot holes. An even finer second-feature from the same director, Behind Locked Doors, has recently received mainstream video release.
    6hitchcockthelegend

    I'm not ill and I'm not insane. And I'm certainly not the victim of hallucinations.

    Escape in the Fog is directed by Oscar "Budd" Boetticher and written by Aubrey Wisberg. It stars Nina Foch, William Wright, Otto Kruger and Konstantin Shayne.

    Foch plays nurse Eileen Carr who dreams of a man being murdered only to wake and meet the man in real life...

    Solid programmer out of Columbia, Escape in the Fog runs at just over an hour and gets by on its nifty spy like premise and a good sense of atmosphere. Boetticher himself would say that this early period in his career was all about a learning curve, and he shows some nice economical touches to mask the low budget nature of the production. Film is at its best when Frisco is fog bound, while the war time shenanigans amount to race against time espionage intrigue. Noir darling Foch is good value and Wright decent hero/romantic foil, and the skulduggery dealing villains are a fun product of the time. 6/10
    gerdeen-1

    A little atmosphere goes a long way

    Fog was a frequently used device in the "B" thrillers of the 1930s and '40s. It was a way to disguise the cheap sets while adding an element of menace. In this low-budget tale of enemy agents on the dark, glistening streets of San Francisco, the fog is almost one of the stars.

    Nina Foch plays a World War II military nurse whose dream about a murder allows her to anticipate the real-life actions of the bad guys. It was just a single dream -- never really explained -- and otherwise she has no psychic powers. (She can't detect a spy hiding a few feet from her.) She's also not particularly smart, though no dumber than the federal agents she helps.

    The heroine's love interest, as well as the subject of her dream, is a a kind of G-Man played by William Wright. He and his boss, portrayed by Otto Kruger, are at work on a plan to boost the war effort against Japan. Unfortunately, Nazi agents have compromised U.S. security and are on the verge of foiling the plan and committing some mayhem. The dreamer comes in handy.

    In some ways, this movie is less "patriotic" than you might expect. Unintentionally, it makes American home-front security in World War II look amateurish. Everybody seems awfully naive. Wright's character gets a lot of mileage out of the little badge he flashes to local authorities, but it looks like a prize out of a cereal box. Most people would probably ask for more ID, considering that the fate of the nation hangs on his being legit.

    "Escape in the Fog" has its corny and improbable elements, like most such movies. But it's entertaining, and the cast is more than adequate. Foch is more vulnerable and appealing than in her later roles. Wright, who got his best breaks during the war years but died too young to make much of a career, does fine in a rather routine role. And it's nice to see Kruger, who often played icy Nazi sympathizers, as one of the good guys.

    This movie came out very late in the war, when the Nazis were already done for and the Japanese were only weeks from defeat. It does seem odd that Germans instead of Japanese are shown working as spies for Tokyo. My wild guess is that Asian actors, many of whom were still getting parts in films about the Pacific War, were not available for the average inexpensive "B" mystery. In this picture, even "Chinatown" has very few non-Caucasians, which actually prompts a subtle quip from one of the villains.
    7bmacv

    Clever, economical wartime espionage thriller set in foggy Frisco

    In 1945, Dutch-born actress Nina Foch had the good fortune to star in a pair of economical, satisfying thrillers. She was a damsel in distress in Joseph H. Lewis' My Name Is Julia Ross, an updated Gothic set in England. In Budd (then ‘Oscar') Boettischer's wartime espionage drama Escape In The Fog, she's a dame in distress in the city by the bay.

    It opens in a nightmare she's having. Walking one fog-bound night on the Golden Gate Bridge, she sees three men piling out of a taxi trying to kill a fourth. She screams – and the screams bring to her room in Ye Rustic Dell Inn other guests running to her aid. One of them is the intended victim in her dream (William Wright), whom she's never before laid eyes on. They hit it off, though, and he persuades her to join him for a few days in San Francisco.

    Their fling seems destined to be a short one, however, as Wright's a government agent who receives orders from his operator Otto Kruger to courier top-secret documents to Hong Kong. But he's waylaid by agents of the Axis powers, led by Konstantin Shayne. Luckily, Foch believes that her nightmare was in fact a premonition, and rushes off to the Golden Gate Bridge, this time for real....

    It's not an especially memorable movie, but it's clever and atmospheric. If its ingenuity at times seems a bit stretched, it's stretched in the (pop)corny way of Saturday matinee serials of the era. There's of course the obligatory dose of wartime rhetoric, with much derision of `Japs,' while the Germans all speak in the most guttural tones they can reach without doing irreparable damage to the larynxes. Still, Boettischer keeps those fog machines churning, and there's plenty of skullduggery in Chinatown at Midnight. Not a bad way to while away an hour-plus.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      When the two leads get into a taxi and are subsequently joined by the two bad guys due to the wartime restriction to fill cabs, the taxi driver is a very young Shelley Winters.
    • Gaffes
      The film opens with an establishing shot of the San Francisco Bay Bridge, then shows Eileen Carr (Nina Foch) standing on a bridge walkway and being accosted by a policeman who asks if she's there to kill herself. The Bay Bridge has no walkway and is not known as a suicide site; scenarist Aubrey Wisberg probably had it confused with the Golden Gate Bridge, which does have a walkway and is famous as a suicide bridge.
    • Citations

      Eileen Carr: Well, the fog couldn't be any thicker.

      Paul Devon: Fog? What fog? I don't see any fog.

      Eileen Carr: Well, what do you call this?

      Paul Devon: Moonlight... in a new disguise. It's everything, but more mysterious and beautiful.

      Eileen Carr: Do you really see all that?

      Paul Devon: Uh-huh... in your eyes.

      Eileen Carr: Well darling, keep looking. And I hope I'm not dreaming tonight.

    • Connexions
      Featured in Budd Boetticher: A Man Can Do That (2005)

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    FAQ

    • How long is Escape in the Fog?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 5 avril 1945 (États-Unis)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Allemand
      • Chinois
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Escape in the Fog
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Hollywood, Californie, États-Unis
    • Société de production
      • Columbia Pictures
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 3 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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