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Gestapo

Título original: Night Train to Munich
  • 1940
  • Not Rated
  • 1 h 35 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,2/10
6 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Rex Harrison and Margaret Lockwood in Gestapo (1940)
DramaRomanceThrillerWar

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaAfter Germany invades Czechia, the German and the British intelligence services try to capture Czech scientist Dr. Axel Bomasch (James Harcourt), inventor of a new type of armor-plating.After Germany invades Czechia, the German and the British intelligence services try to capture Czech scientist Dr. Axel Bomasch (James Harcourt), inventor of a new type of armor-plating.After Germany invades Czechia, the German and the British intelligence services try to capture Czech scientist Dr. Axel Bomasch (James Harcourt), inventor of a new type of armor-plating.

  • Direção
    • Carol Reed
  • Roteiristas
    • Gordon Wellesley
    • Sidney Gilliat
    • Frank Launder
  • Artistas
    • Margaret Lockwood
    • Rex Harrison
    • Paul Henreid
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    7,2/10
    6 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Carol Reed
    • Roteiristas
      • Gordon Wellesley
      • Sidney Gilliat
      • Frank Launder
    • Artistas
      • Margaret Lockwood
      • Rex Harrison
      • Paul Henreid
    • 66Avaliações de usuários
    • 38Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Indicado a 1 Oscar
      • 4 vitórias e 3 indicações no total

    Fotos60

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    + 54
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    Elenco principal44

    Editar
    Margaret Lockwood
    Margaret Lockwood
    • Anna Bomasch
    Rex Harrison
    Rex Harrison
    • Dickie Randall - a.k.a. Gus Bennett
    Paul Henreid
    Paul Henreid
    • Karl Marsen
    • (as Paul von Hernried)
    Basil Radford
    Basil Radford
    • Charters
    Naunton Wayne
    Naunton Wayne
    • Caldicott
    James Harcourt
    James Harcourt
    • Axel Bomasch
    Felix Aylmer
    Felix Aylmer
    • Dr. John Fredericks
    Wyndham Goldie
    • Dryton
    Roland Culver
    Roland Culver
    • Roberts
    Eliot Makeham
    Eliot Makeham
    • Schwab
    Raymond Huntley
    Raymond Huntley
    • Kampenfeldt
    Austin Trevor
    Austin Trevor
    • Capt. Prada
    • (as Austen Trevor)
    Kenneth Kent
    Kenneth Kent
    • Controller
    • (as Keneth Kent)
    C.V. France
    C.V. France
    • Adm. Hassinger
    Frederick Valk
    Frederick Valk
    • Gestapo Officer
    • (as Fritz Valk)
    Morland Graham
    • Teleferic Attendant
    Edward Baxter
    • Minor Role
    • (não creditado)
    Jane Cobb
    • Minor Role
    • (não creditado)
    • Direção
      • Carol Reed
    • Roteiristas
      • Gordon Wellesley
      • Sidney Gilliat
      • Frank Launder
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários66

    7,25.9K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    9John L.

    Charters and Caldicot Hit One For The Home Team

    I disagree with the user who commented that these two fine characters are a couple of "English Dolts". English they most certainly are and that is the point. Dolts they are most certainly not. The writer uses them as comic relief and to parody the British Middle and Upper Class mentality that ignored Facisim in Europe for so long. Their preoccupation with cricket, tennis and golf is but a tool. Mistaking "Mein Kampf" for a marital aid is both a joke and a jab at English ignorance of matters concerning the Continent. One can almost here them make that classic comment attributed to another Englishman; "the Wogs begin at Calais." Their bumbling actions are an example of English self deprecating humor. I have enjoyed these two characters in a number of films and only wish they had appeared in more.
    Snow Leopard

    Entertaining Hitchcock-Like Suspense

    "Night Train to Munich" is a rather conscious attempt by director Carol Reed to imitate the style of Alfred Hitchcock, and it succeeds much better than do most such movies. It is an entertaining blend of suspense and humor, with a good cast and some enjoyable scenes.

    Margaret Lockwood stars as the daughter of a Czech scientist pursued by the Nazis. She escapes their clutches once, but is again captured, and a British spy (Rex Harrison) has to go undercover to try to save her and her father. Lockwood and Harrison are joined by Paul Henreid, and also by Basil Radford and Naunton Wayne, who had appeared with Lockwood in Hitchcock's "The Lady Vanishes" and appear here playing the same humorous pair of English travelers.

    There are a lot of action sequences and a couple of good twists, with the crucial action taking place on a train. It's all done nicely, with an exciting finale as well. Some parts of it may be rather implausible, but the same could have been said of a few of Hitchcock's films, and this is only slightly less polished than his are. "Night Train to Munich" is quite entertaining in its own right, and is definitely worth seeing.
    9MIKE-WILSON6

    Carol Reed has created a classic in the same mould as Hitchcock's ‘Lady Vanishes'

    A wonderful spy thriller, has Margaret Lockwood as Anna

    Bomasch, the daughter of a Czech scientist, who is whisked off to England for safety, when the

    Germans invade. Lockwood is imprisoned in a concentration

    camp. Later she meets up with Karl Marsen (Paul Henreid ) and

    they engineer an escape together and meet up with her father in

    England. When the Germans recapture them, Gus Bennett (Rex

    Harrison a M.I.5. agent) is assigned to bring them back. Lockwood and Harrison spark off each other wonderfully well, and

    in a small role is Irene Handl, but the film is almost stolen by Basil

    Radford, and Naunton Wayne, as the two cricket loving Englishmen, who were such a big hit in Hitchcock's ‘Lady

    Vanishes'. After seeing this film for the umpteenth time, it is every bit as good

    as ‘Lady Vanishes' and well worth recommending.
    8secondtake

    Extremely witty, fast, dramatic, and politically charged

    Night Train to Munich (1940)

    This British movie was made in 1940 a year after German and Britain began WWII. It is set in the late summer of 1939, just as the declaration of war was on the horizon. And while the filming and post-production is going on, London is being bombed by the Nazi air force. (The film was released in December, several months after the first raids.)

    The most memorable lead is Rex Harrison playing an agent and double agent, falling in love with and saving the scientist's daughter (Margaret Lockwood) as well as the scientist himself (while he's at it). And then as a competing suitor, the dubiously aligned German officer played by Paul Henreid, who a year later would play a kind of counterpoint in the American Nazi film, "Casablanca."

    Director Carol Reed marshals all these forces and makes a surprisingly terrific movie. It's fast, smart, fanciful, and patriotic. It's also really really funny, and the more you catch the British humor the more you'll be glad--at times it's relentless even as its subtle. The little barbs against the Germans, both as German stereotypes and as Nazi buffoons, is highly calculated. The British come off as daring and dashing, even the bumbling travelers rise to the occasion. It's often been commented that Harrison makes a very fit precursor to James Bond, and there must be a backwards truth to that because Ian Fleming (who invented Bond) was a WWII British OSS worker. Art imitating life. Imitating art.

    And yes, this is an homage and reference (if not sequel) to Hitchcock's "The Lady Vanishes," including use of the same writers, the same kind of comic suspense, the same leading actress, and even two comic side characters from one train to the other. Reed even acknowledged the connections, as if he could deny them, and wanted no doubt to coattail some of the movies huge success.

    It taints a movie to call it propaganda, so I won't. It's not, really. What it does (just as "Casablanca" does) is strike one up for the good guys. You end the movie thinking the British might just win this thing. And at the time that wasn't a foregone conclusion--London was only sinking further into the terror of the Blitz. Of course, we know that British resolve and resourcefulness won the day, with a little outside help, and this is part of exactly that.

    Great stuff.
    nk_gillen

    The Spy Who Went Into the Cold

    Carol Reed directed this wartime spy-thriller. And though it may feel routine, there are individual scenes and performers who remain vivid: the flippant egoism of Rex Harrison's British agent; the vulnerability of Margaret Lockwood's wartime refugee; the naked sensitivity of Paul Henreid's villain. All in all, an interesting romantic triangle.

    The story opens in 1938, as the camera tracks into Hitler's mountain retreat over Berchtesgaden, and we witness the dictator ordering the Czech occupation. Hitler desires not only territory, but the talented scientists within - geniuses such as Axel Bomasch, an industrial wizard who barely eludes capture, flying safely to England. There, he is safeguarded by a British Intelligence officer, code name "Gus Bennett" (Harrison). However, the Germans succeed in arresting Bomasch's daughter, Anna (Ms. Lockwood). imprisoning her in a concentration-camp where she befriends fellow inmate Karl Marsen (Henreid). They both successfully escape and sail a tramp steamer for England: Anna, to re-unite with her father; and Marsen, to make contact with those who share his real allegiance - to the Third Reich. With the help of a double agent (Felix Aylmer), Marsen abducts both Bomasch and Anna, who are transported to Berlin. Bennett, angry at his own lapse in security, volunteers to travel to Germany disguised as an officer of Hitler's High Command in order to retrieve the pair.

    The film then accelerates into a series of tense confrontations between Bennett and those he hopes to dupe, in both Berlin and on a train to Munich. The action culminates in a skillfully directed chase scene climaxing on the Swiss border, where the term "cliff- hanger" takes on literal meaning. Along the way, there appear various secondary characters - the 'team' of Basil Radford and Naunton Wayne, for example, are thrown in for their droll underplaying ("No copies of Punch?! Hmmm. Must have sold out."). But the real comic relief is provided by Irene Handl as a German stationmaster who, in one scene, brushes off Radford and Wayne like so much confetti. Her expert scene-stealing marks the highest moment of levity in the film.

    The one element in Carol Reed's storytelling that always distinguished him as a director was a quality he shared with Jean Renoir - the generous feeling he conveyed toward all of his characters. Human flaws and defects such as professional incompetence and blind allegiance are noted but tolerated. The rigid bureaucracy of a dictatorial government is deftly satirized in the character of a German civil servant (Raymond Huntley) who, when confronted with a forged document, is asked by his Nazi superiors if he knows what this means. The bureaucrat politely replies, "Yes. It means I shall have to sack my secretary."

    And in "Night Train's" final frame, we observe Henreid's Nazi, jilted in more ways than one; yet Reed frames him sorrowfully, as if he were a sort of Universal Everyloser. Reed's sympathy, again, extends to all. Such unusual compassion on the part of a director is what finally separates "Night Train" from other war propaganda films.

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    Enredo

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    Você sabia?

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    • Curiosidades
      As of 2011, this movie has not been released in Germany.
    • Erros de gravação
      While on the train Randall, mentions England being led by Churchill. The film is set in September 1939 when the Prime Minister was Neville Chamberlain. At the time Winston Churchill was merely a back-bench MP until the 3rd Sept when he was appointed First Lord of the Admiralty and given a seat on the War Cabinet; he would not ascend to Prime Minister until May 1940.
    • Citações

      Charters: I bought a copy of Mein Kampf. Occurred to me it might shed a spot of light on all this... how d'ye do. Ever read it?

      Caldicott: Never had the time.

      Charters: I understand they give a copy to all the bridal couples over here.

      Caldicott: Oh, I don't think it's that sort of book, old man.

    • Cenas durante ou pós-créditos
      Paul Henreid is listed as Paul von Hernried in the credits.
    • Versões alternativas
      There is an Italian edition of this film on DVD, distributed by DNA srl, "TRENO DI NOTTE PER MONACO (Night Train to Munich, 1940) + ODD MAN OUT (Fuggiasco, 1947)" (2 Films on a single DVD), re-edited with the contribution of film historian Riccardo Cusin. This version is also available for streaming on some platforms.
    • Conexões
      Edited into All This and World War II (1976)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Das Lied der Deutschen
      (uncredited)

      aka "Deutschland über Alles"

      Music by Joseph Haydn

      Variations played throughout

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    Perguntas frequentes16

    • How long is Night Train to Munich?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 26 de julho de 1940 (Reino Unido)
    • Países de origem
      • Reino Unido
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idiomas
      • Inglês
      • Alemão
    • Também conhecido como
      • Night Train to Munich
    • Locações de filme
      • Gaumont-British Studios, Lime Grove, Shepherd's Bush, Londres, Inglaterra, Reino Unido
    • Empresa de produção
      • Twentieth Century-Fox Productions
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      1 hora 35 minutos
    • Cor
      • Black and White
    • Proporção
      • 1.37 : 1

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