Durante la II guerra mondiale, un'infermiera dell'esercito a San Francisco ha la premonizione di aver assistito a un tentativo di omicidio contro un G-man da parte di agenti nazisti.Durante la II guerra mondiale, un'infermiera dell'esercito a San Francisco ha la premonizione di aver assistito a un tentativo di omicidio contro un G-man da parte di agenti nazisti.Durante la II guerra mondiale, un'infermiera dell'esercito a San Francisco ha la premonizione di aver assistito a un tentativo di omicidio contro un G-man da parte di agenti nazisti.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Woman at Accident
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- Pedestrian
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- Chinese Boy
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- Detective
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- Accident Witness
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- Kolb - Henchman
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- Hilary Gale
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- Lieutenant Commander
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- Police Desk Sergeant
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- Thomas - Butler
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- Chang Yong
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- Mr. Boggs
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Recensioni in evidenza
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.
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
Lo sapevi?
- QuizWhen 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.
- BlooperThe 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.
- Citazioni
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.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Budd Boetticher: A Man Can Do That (2005)
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Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 3 minuti
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1