तुर्की में एक अमेरिकी बैलिस्टिक विशेषज्ञ खुद को जर्मन एजेंटों के निशाने पर पाता है। उसके लिए जहाज़ से सुरक्षित घर वापसी की व्यवस्था की जाती है, लेकिन उसे जल्द ही पता चलता है कि उसका पीछा करन... सभी पढ़ेंतुर्की में एक अमेरिकी बैलिस्टिक विशेषज्ञ खुद को जर्मन एजेंटों के निशाने पर पाता है। उसके लिए जहाज़ से सुरक्षित घर वापसी की व्यवस्था की जाती है, लेकिन उसे जल्द ही पता चलता है कि उसका पीछा करने वाले भी जहाज़ पर सवार हैं।तुर्की में एक अमेरिकी बैलिस्टिक विशेषज्ञ खुद को जर्मन एजेंटों के निशाने पर पाता है। उसके लिए जहाज़ से सुरक्षित घर वापसी की व्यवस्था की जाती है, लेकिन उसे जल्द ही पता चलता है कि उसका पीछा करने वाले भी जहाज़ पर सवार हैं।
- Josette Martel
- (as Dolores Del Rio)
- Russian Maid at Batumi Hotel
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
- Turkish Officer
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
- Ship's Steward
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
Welles's solution get Cotten out of the country so if he's killed at least it won't be on his watch. Welles books passage on a tramp freighter for Cotten and the freighter is loaded with highly interesting characters, one of whom at least is a Nazi assassin.
This was another Mercury Theater production with most of the regulars from Citizen Kane/The Magnificent Ambersons back again. Welles's police inspector is a small, but crucial part of the story.
Welles, for whatever reason is being unduly modest. Journey Into Fear is undoubtedly the greatest film that Orson Welles never took credit for directing. I can find certain touches here from Citizen Kane, The Magnificent Ambersons, and The Stranger. If he didn't officially direct you can take it to the bank that Norman Foster knew exactly what Welles was trying to get out of each and every scene.
Look also here for a good performance by Mexican cinema great Dolores Del Rio as a most mysterious femme fatale on the freighter.
Journey Into Fear is a short film, slightly less than 70 minutes running time. I'm sure that RKO had it playing at the bottom end of double features. Maybe we'll see a 'director's cut' of this one day and know what Welles's own perspective was.
Nonetheless, the nightclub scene especially stays with me. Catch the neatly choreographed staging as the characters dart in and out of the foreground reminiscent of the high-kicking dance scene in Citizen Kane. And who else but a magician (Hans Conreid) would trick himself into a casket with such Wellsian flourish. Note too how visually appropriate non- actor Jack Moss is as the "obese gunman". Apparently, he couldn't be entrusted with any lines, but looking like a mutant garden slug he rivets the eye by sinister presence alone. In fact, this may be the kind of film made more enjoyable by turning down the sound and just reveling in the visuals. Yes indeed, the narrative may disappoint, but the very real Wellsian compensations remain.
The story is based on Eric Ambler's highly regarded spy thriller, and sees Howard Graham {Joseph Cotton} as an American engineer, who after a conference in Turkey finds that someone is trying to kill him. We are then thrust into a murky world of espionage where everybody, their motives, and their identities are suspect. Graham is the classic innocent man abroad, we the viewers, as well as everyone in the story but Graham, knows more than he does! I bet Hitchcock loved this film for it be right up his alley. The majority of the film takes place aboard a cramped dilapidated liner, this gives off a wonderfully claustrophobic feel to proceedings. The stifling nature further enhanced by the fact that 99% of the film is set at night time, with Karl Struss' photography utilising shadows and exuding an almost bizarre menacing sheen. There's some nice technical Welles trademarks in here, such as crane shots {the opening scene is moodily awesome} and Welles' well publicised love of magic is given a cute nod during one particularly impacting sequence.
Along side Cotton the cast contains solid performers like Dolores del Rio, Everett Sloane, Ruth Warwick and Agnes Moorehead. But it's Cotton who rightly makes the big impact. Understated and quiet, his Howard Graham infuriates with his inability to grasp what is going on, or to act at times when it clearly calls for the swift clank of brain being put into gear. A real smart bit of casting here from Foster, Welles or whoever! Journey Into Fear, for texture and technical composition belongs in the film-noir genre, certainly as far as the early cycle goes. But really it's a film for the general cinema purists, at times brilliant, at others chaotic, it remains engrossing from start to finish. See it if you can. 8/10
The assassin was short and fat; his belly large, his chin and neck flabby... I do not recall him having a line of dialog to speak But the whole film was spread with heightened menace when he sat, his little round eyes blank behind his little round pebble lenses, listening compulsively to the atrociously scratchy record, confusing the words of the song at the wrong speed, the needle jumping from groove to groove; his nerve-ends, unlike ours, immune to the discordance
This was a spy thriller set in the wartime Near East, about an innocent American engineer (Joseph Cotten), pursued by Nazi agents and blundering from danger to danger without seeming to know too much of what it was all about It was essentially a hunter-and-hunted story, with settings that were often seedy but always exotic
The opening was in Istanbul, the climax in Batum, and all the terrors between were forced claustrophobically between the low ceilings and narrow partitions of a neglected little steamer plowing the Black Sea
"Journey Into Fear" lives for its portrait gallery, its atmosphere, and for Welles' touches and excesses
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाThe great stage actor Richard Bennett had been brought back to films by Orson Welles for The Magnificent Ambersons (1942). Although his performance as old Major Amberson has become legendary, it was achieved with great difficulty, as Bennett, by then an old man near death, found it hard to remember his lines, and his eyesight was too poor for him to be able to read cue-cards. Welles's patience in dealing with these problems has been widely described. When he cast Bennett as the ship's captain, he overcame the problems simply by giving Bennett no dialogue at all, although the character has several memorable scenes. It was Bennett's final film role.
- गूफ़During the chase outside the hotel in the rain, Banat's pistol, a P-08 "Luger" runs out of ammunition, but the action closes normally after he fires the last shot. This particular pistol was designed so that the action stays open after the last round is fired, giving a clear indication to the user that the gun is empty.
- भाव
Colonel Haki: Ah, you have this advantage over the soldier, Mr. Graham. You can run away without being a coward.
- इसके अलावा अन्य वर्जनIn 2005 an alternate cut was shown at the Orson Welles film retrospective in Locarno, Switzerland. It was the original European release print, lacking the narration and ending of the US version but including about eight minutes of footage later deleted by RKO, reportedly for political and censorship reasons. This alternate version, assembled by Stefan Droessler of the Münchner Filmmuseum, was shown at the Museum of Modern Art on Saturday, November 21, 2015.
- कनेक्शनFeatured in Terminus... the Theater of Science Fiction: Journey into Fear (1970)
- साउंडट्रैकC'est mon coeur
(uncredited)
Written by Steven Morgan
टॉप पसंद
- How long is Journey Into Fear?Alexa द्वारा संचालित
विवरण
- चलने की अवधि
- 1 घं 8 मि(68 min)
- रंग
- पक्ष अनुपात
- 1.37 : 1