A ring of counterfeiters is flooding the country with phony money, and suspicion falls upon a wealthy playboy who may--or may not--have amnesia.A ring of counterfeiters is flooding the country with phony money, and suspicion falls upon a wealthy playboy who may--or may not--have amnesia.A ring of counterfeiters is flooding the country with phony money, and suspicion falls upon a wealthy playboy who may--or may not--have amnesia.
Horst Breitkreuz
- Wärter
- (uncredited)
Günter Hauer
- Taxifahrer
- (uncredited)
Günther Jerschke
- Rechtsanwalt Radlow
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
- …
Heinz Klevenow
- John Leith
- (uncredited)
Heidrun Kussin
- Hausmädchen Mary
- (uncredited)
Hans Lohfing
- Diener James
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Karin Dor ("The Green Archer") and Siegfried Lowitz ("Der Frosch mit der Maske") return for the 7th entry of the Edgar Wallace series, while Hellmut Lange stars for the first time as Peter Clifton who marries the beautiful Jane (Karin Dor). Jane discovers a printing machine for banknotes in her new home. Has she just married "The Forger of London", or who else could be responsible for the counterfeits? Funny enough, Peter doesn't know that himself because he seems to be a victim of schizophrenia... which Jane once dryly describes to him thus: "Can you imagine how interesting it is to have a husband who never knows where he wakes up?" Typical music by Martin Böttcher, unusual story, powerfully directed by Harald Reinl - a good movie, even if none of the most popular in the series. Apparently the producers tried to break fresh ground here instead of repeating a formula, and this courage is one reason why the Edgar Wallace series lasted so long.
Karin Dor marries wealthy Hellmut Lange, but all is not sunny. Her uncle and friends assume she married him for money, of course. At the same time as the marriage Little do they know that he is worried that his father's madness will descend upon him! At the same time, fake bank bills made by "the Forger of London" start showing up, and all the clues point to Mr. Lange. Why then, is Chief Inspector Siegfried Lowitz helping Miss Dor destroy evidence? Could he be part of the forgery ring?
It's one of the Edgar Wallace mysteries shot in Germany. You can tell. Not only is the English dialogue inexpertly looped, but the players move nothing at all like English people. Of course, bad voicework on foreign movies is a hallmark of cheap foreign productions. Anyone who has not noticed that most of the men in Italian peplum movies sound sound like Paul Frees has not been paying attention. Still, it is easy to accept that people in ancient Greece moved like the actors in those movies, because we have no other standards to judge by. 20th-Century Englishmen are another matter, at least when it comes to movie actors, and there's a clear difference in the physical performances.
Still, it's a nicely convoluted murder mystery that appears to be going nowhere for a while, until the answer pops out at you and you realize that, yes, it has been more than adequately foreshadowed. That's something.
It's one of the Edgar Wallace mysteries shot in Germany. You can tell. Not only is the English dialogue inexpertly looped, but the players move nothing at all like English people. Of course, bad voicework on foreign movies is a hallmark of cheap foreign productions. Anyone who has not noticed that most of the men in Italian peplum movies sound sound like Paul Frees has not been paying attention. Still, it is easy to accept that people in ancient Greece moved like the actors in those movies, because we have no other standards to judge by. 20th-Century Englishmen are another matter, at least when it comes to movie actors, and there's a clear difference in the physical performances.
Still, it's a nicely convoluted murder mystery that appears to be going nowhere for a while, until the answer pops out at you and you realize that, yes, it has been more than adequately foreshadowed. That's something.
Did you know
- TriviaDirector Harald Reinl wanted a relatively unknown actor for the role of Peter Clifton in order to confuse the audience more about the character's position and eventually casted stage actor Hellmut Lange. Reinl wanted the audience to remain unsure about the ambiguous character of Clifton till the ending of the film. Lange later went on to become one of Germany's most popular Television-Actors in the late 60ies.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Frissons teutons - Les Films Edgar Wallace (2011)
Details
- Runtime1 hour 33 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.66 : 1
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Top Gap
By what name was Der Fälscher von London (1961) officially released in Canada in English?
Answer