Although the home of cabinet minister Arthur Bennett is a hotbed of spies, moles, and double agents, no one knows the true identity of notorious German spymaster Strendler.Although the home of cabinet minister Arthur Bennett is a hotbed of spies, moles, and double agents, no one knows the true identity of notorious German spymaster Strendler.Although the home of cabinet minister Arthur Bennett is a hotbed of spies, moles, and double agents, no one knows the true identity of notorious German spymaster Strendler.
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- British Intelligence Agent
- (uncredited)
- Miss Risdon
- (uncredited)
- Under Officer Pfalz
- (uncredited)
- Capt. Lanark
- (uncredited)
- German Officer
- (uncredited)
- Von Ritter
- (uncredited)
- Milkman
- (uncredited)
- German Junior Officer
- (uncredited)
- Otto Kurtz
- (uncredited)
- Brigadier General
- (uncredited)
- German Soldier
- (uncredited)
- Cabinet Minister
- (uncredited)
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Featured reviews
The setup is easy to describe, you have several spies, two in particular. There's a sort of mystery about where their allegiance lies.
Its a simple idea, but done well, because this was a long-running play, so had the time work out the dramatic and narrative effects, much more attention than the normal script would have.
Its Germans as the bad guys, of course, evil just dripping in the way that it only could between the great German wars.
I like this because of the way it co-opts the detective form. The viewer is drawn in. Clearly there are bad guys and good ones, but you don't know which is which who to cheer for until the end. You're drawn in as a sort of virtual detective.
Everyone is watching everyone else. Its the motive and roles you must learn.
Ted's Evaluation -- 3 of 3: Worth watching.
Set in 1917, the action is presented as directly relevant to the current events of 1940; more than one speech steps aside from the actual plot and appeals to an audience who would know exactly what was meant by references to future wars and to future lunatics who would again want to take over the world. The film's final speaker actually turns straight on to the camera for his inspirational closing sentences—the kind of exhortation that was frequent in WWII era films, that we rarely if ever see in pictures from any other era, and that can be strangely stirring even at this great distance.
Boris Karloff and Margaret Lindsay are both excellent, especially in their scenes together: their eyes are wonderfully expressive as they watch each other, play their roles, calculate loyalties and next moves.
Favorite moment: the late scene at the center of which Karloff purrs, "Excellent. But I'm afraid it won't quite do."
Definitely a spy vs. spy quickie worth watching.
Boris Karloff is Valdar, the butler/valet every man wants. Obsequious and efficient, he claims to be a refugee from war-scarred Euope, a fellow who has lost his family to the murdering Hun. He is ensconced in the home of a powerful Englishman who consorts with the cabinet. Projected into the household in a convenient but not necessarily convincing way is Helene von Lorbeer, played by the very pretty Margaret Lindsay who had a good run in both "A" and "B" pictures in the 30s and 40s before she decided to fatten up thus losing her screen sex appeal.
Helene under another name was a nurse in a British field hospital and she took care of the wounded RFC pilot son of the man in whose home she is now a guest. They fall in love but she can't let him know that since she's a Florence Nightingale with a Mata Hari mission. Of course the recovered pilot returns home to find her there.
British Intelligence desperately needs to terminate a German master spy, Strengler. Who is he? How is he able to glean military secrets before, as one exasperated senior officer exclaims, junior officers are even briefed on the operational plans.
What follows is a fairly taut cat and mouse game seeking the deadly spy.
It's good fun, nice acting. Director Terry O. Morse, who edited more films than he directed, did a better than average job here.
Dated, of course, but that's part of its charm. I wonder if London moviegoers in 1940 needed to be exhorted by speeches denouncing the depraved Boche. Probably not but I'm sure they appreciated Karloff and Lindsay.
7/10
Did you know
- TriviaIn the vestibule of Bennett's home hangs a well-known [reproduction] painting by Rembrandt van Rijn, called 'An Old Man in Military Costume.' Dating from c.1631, it is a portrait of an old man posing in an outfit featuring a metal breastplate and a plumed hat. The original has been owned by the Getty Center in Los Angeles since 1978.
- GoofsWhen in London in a taxi, Helene says to Henry Thompson "Wasn't there a son?" Thompson replies "Frank, I think his name is. He's in France in the Air Force." The Royal Air Force did not come into existence until 1st April 1918 and was at that time The Royal Flying Corps.
- Quotes
Helene von Lorbeer: [undercover as Frances Hawtrey, hoping to meet Strendler] I'm so anxious to meet him, his work, his methods - a genius!
Valdar: No! A symbol of blind duty!
Helene von Lorbeer: Or a complete patriot?
Valdar: Perhaps he has no soul, no conscience, nothing! He'd kill you or me - for duty!
- Crazy creditsThe swelling of the end title music cuts off the end of Colonel Yates's final line. However, as he has just said "We will fight on" and is simply repeating "and on, and on, and on," it was likely not a mistake.
- ConnectionsEdited from La Patrouille de l'aube (1930)
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- British Intelligence Service
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- Runtime1 hour 1 minute
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- 1.37 : 1