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In 1941, a U.S. radio correspondent named Bill Roberts in Berlin broadcasts sensitive information about the Nazis, prompting the Gestapo to investigate these leaks and how they pass the cens... Read allIn 1941, a U.S. radio correspondent named Bill Roberts in Berlin broadcasts sensitive information about the Nazis, prompting the Gestapo to investigate these leaks and how they pass the censors.In 1941, a U.S. radio correspondent named Bill Roberts in Berlin broadcasts sensitive information about the Nazis, prompting the Gestapo to investigate these leaks and how they pass the censors.
Rudolph Anders
- Guard at Airport
- (uncredited)
Louis V. Arco
- Censor
- (uncredited)
John Bleifer
- Prisoner
- (uncredited)
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"Berlin Correspondent" is set just before the United States entered World War II. Bill Roberts (Dana Andrews) is an American news correspondent and it's pretty obvious he hates Nazi Germany, which is where he's been stationed. The Nazis heavily censor his news broadcasts...yet somehow information about the Nazis seems to sneak out...and they suspect Bill is up to something. Eventually they learn his secret but instead of just being tossed out of the country, the Nazis have other plans for him.
Despite having Dana Andrews in the picture, this is a pretty unremarkable film. The Nazis are almost all stupid as well as evil...and Bill is able to trick them again and again because of this. If only the Nazis were this dumb! Overall, a decent time- passer but not much more. And, by the way, oddly the Germans almost all sound just like Americans!
Despite having Dana Andrews in the picture, this is a pretty unremarkable film. The Nazis are almost all stupid as well as evil...and Bill is able to trick them again and again because of this. If only the Nazis were this dumb! Overall, a decent time- passer but not much more. And, by the way, oddly the Germans almost all sound just like Americans!
You will find this little bit of propoganda typical of the period mid Second World War just before the U. S. got drawn into the conflict by the Pearl Harbor attack quite enjoyable.
Very short running time but it has all the tropes of the propganda films. The villainous Nazi Gestapo being at the forefrunt here.
Dana Andrews delivers a gusto performance as the American Berlin 'Correspondent' who is revealing secrets from Germany over coded radio broadcasts.
He falls for a Gestapo agent who tries to investigate if he is the source of the leak in the process dragging her father into the Gestapo investigation with deadly consequences.
The film keeps you engrossed throughout and has some thrilling scenes more becoming of a higher budget film.
Very short running time but it has all the tropes of the propganda films. The villainous Nazi Gestapo being at the forefrunt here.
Dana Andrews delivers a gusto performance as the American Berlin 'Correspondent' who is revealing secrets from Germany over coded radio broadcasts.
He falls for a Gestapo agent who tries to investigate if he is the source of the leak in the process dragging her father into the Gestapo investigation with deadly consequences.
The film keeps you engrossed throughout and has some thrilling scenes more becoming of a higher budget film.
This was actually entertaining. The acting was quite good, and there was suspense and humor. The pace was just right -- not too frenetic, but it moved right along. The low budget was betrayed mostly by the sets. The concentration camp was obviously left over from a Western cowboy movie set. Log cabin watch towers? Also, the entrance to the camp looked like something from "F Troop." When a plane takes off from a supposed Nazi airfield, the buildings around the field look suspiciously like the sound stages on movie lots.
I also noticed the Hans Gruber name -- it was actually the name of the stamp shop being used by the hero and the heroine's father to pass secret information.
I actually liked that the Nazi colonel's secretary (who was secretly in love him) was not the stereotype that I expected, and her role was not what I expected either.
I also noticed the Hans Gruber name -- it was actually the name of the stamp shop being used by the hero and the heroine's father to pass secret information.
I actually liked that the Nazi colonel's secretary (who was secretly in love him) was not the stereotype that I expected, and her role was not what I expected either.
Very mucjh reminding of similar rants like "Comrade X" and Lubitsch's "To Be or Not to Be" and other similar comedies who all compete in turning all established officials into astronomic dunderheads and ridiculous idiots, and here is even Sig Ruman to complete the Nazi haberdashery getting out of his pants. All you miss here is a caricature of Hitler also. But Dana Andrews is good with a moustache, almost like Douglas Fairbanks Jr, and Virginia Gilmore is charming and sexy enough, even for a German spy. The plot is ridiculously absurd to start with, but when it comes to her father it gets more interesting, and there is even some inside views of a concentration camp with its atrocities - fairly iunknown to Amerticans in 1942. In brief, this is qualified entertainment, there are some pleasant surprises towards the end as the plots thicken up, and of course it all ends well for everyone except for Germany, - as everyone knows. It is better than "Comrade X" but can not compete with "To Be or Not to Bet" or with "Pimpernel Smith".
This 1942 film by 20th Century Fox, was shown the other night. It is pure propaganda, as many others of the period, when Hollywood was seen as the right medium to advance the cause for the war. Eugene Forde directed this mildly engrossing movie that although flawed has some surprising good moments.
Best of all is Bill Roberts, our man in Berlin, who transmits his radio broadcast with his own slant, telling what was really happening in spite of the censure he must go through. There is intrigue all over the place, but our hero is wiser than the people that are trying to get him. The plot involves some spying from a woman that Bill doesn't suspect is the daughter of his contact in Berlin, who sees the light when she learns her father has been imprisoned because of his illegal activities.
Dana Andrews is good as Bill Roberts, the American correspondent in Berlin. Virginia Gilmore is his love interest. Martin Koleck is perfect as Capt. von Rau, and Mona Maris does a good job portraying the bad Nazi girl.
The film is entertaining and while it doesn't break new ground, will keep the viewer entertained because of the good direction from Mr. Forde.
Best of all is Bill Roberts, our man in Berlin, who transmits his radio broadcast with his own slant, telling what was really happening in spite of the censure he must go through. There is intrigue all over the place, but our hero is wiser than the people that are trying to get him. The plot involves some spying from a woman that Bill doesn't suspect is the daughter of his contact in Berlin, who sees the light when she learns her father has been imprisoned because of his illegal activities.
Dana Andrews is good as Bill Roberts, the American correspondent in Berlin. Virginia Gilmore is his love interest. Martin Koleck is perfect as Capt. von Rau, and Mona Maris does a good job portraying the bad Nazi girl.
The film is entertaining and while it doesn't break new ground, will keep the viewer entertained because of the good direction from Mr. Forde.
Did you know
- TriviaEarly in the film when Andrews is being followed by an investigator, he dodges him in a revolving door and walks into a store which has the name Hans Gruber on it. The villain in "Die Hard" is named Hans Gruber.
- GoofsThe movie opens with a radio broadcast by Bill Robertson from Berlin, Germany, in which he states that for 26 days Berlin has not been bombed. Just then, a bombing of Berlin begins. The movie then has footage of Stuka dive bombers bombing a city. However, Stukas were a German airplane.
- ConnectionsEdited into La guerre, la musique, Hollywood et nous... (1976)
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- Also known as
- Berlin Correspondent
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- Runtime
- 1h 10m(70 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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