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State Secret (1950 film)

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Wikipedia article




'State Secret' is a 1950 British drama film directed by Sidney Gilliat and starring Douglas Fairbanks Jr., Jack Hawkins, Glynis Johns, Olga Lowe and Herbert Lom.[http://www.bfi.org.uk/films-tv-people/4ce2b6b73c039 "Review: 'State Secret'."] 'BFI'. Retrieved: 23 July 2016. It was made at Isleworth Studios with Italian location shooting in Trento and the Dolomites. It was released in the United States under the title 'The Great Manhunt'.[http://movies.tvguide.com/the-great-manhunt/review/125103 "The Great Manhunt."] 'TV Guide'. Retrieved: 23 July 2016.

Plot



John Marlowe is an American surgeon visiting England when he is invited to Vosnia (a fictitious East-European country) to receive the "Kepler Gold Medal" for his contributions to medical science, and, coincidentally, to demonstrate his new techniques on a patient. Midway through the operation, he discovers that he is operating on the Vosnian dictator, General Niva. Niva dies during the recovery period. From talking beforehand with Colonel Galcon, the Minister of Health, Minister of Public Services and Minister for State Security, Marlowe is certain he is doomedhe knows too muchso he makes his escape while Galcon is distracted by Niva's death. With elections coming soon, the general is replaced by a double, and Marlowe is hunted by the state police.

Marlowe's attempts to telephone and reach the American embassy nearly get him captured. While hiding in a theater during a show, he notices a woman singing in English. He goes backstage and enlists the help of the reluctant, half-English Lisa. Marlowe has an idea: inside the coat he was accidentally given in a barber shop, by the barber, they find a wallet containing the ID of a Karl Theodor, and foreign currency, the possession of which is a capital offense in Vosnia. They blackmail the smuggler Theodor into helping them. They are pursued across the country and are on the point of escaping across the border when one of Karl's men, who is leading them across the mountains, is shot by a border guard and killed, and Lisa is wounded. Marlowe refuses to abandon her, and is captured by Galcon's men.

Galcon arranges a "shooting accident" for Marlowe, but as he is about to walk outside to his fate, the substitute for dictator Niva makes a live speech on the radio, and shots are heard. Galcon confirms by telephone that the stand-in has been assassinated. As the people have witnessed the death of Niva, albeit the fake Niva, it is no longer necessary to maintain the cover-up, nor to eliminate Marlowe and Robinson, who are subsequently released and fly to freedom in the West, and ultimately to their new life together in America.

Cast



* Douglas Fairbanks Jr. as Dr. John Marlowe

* Glynis Johns as Lisa Robinson

* Olga Lowe as Baba (the taller "Sister Robinson")

* Therese van Kye as Teresa (the shorter "Sister Robinson")

* Jack Hawkins as Colonel Galcon

* Walter Rilla as General Niva

* Karel Stepanek as Dr. Revo

* Leonard Sachs as Dr. Poldoi

* Herbert Lom as Theodor

* Robert Ayres as Buckman

* Howard Douglas as Clubman

* Martin Boddey as Clubman

* Russell Waters as Clubman

* Arthur Howard as Clubman

* Carl Jaff as Prada

* Gerard Heinz as Bendel

* Leo Bieber as Man at Telephone Box

* Nelly Arno as Shop Woman

* Paul Demel as Barber

* Danny Green as Taxi Driver

* Anton Diffring as State Policeman

* Peter Illing as Macco

* Arthur Reynolds as Compere

* Richard Molinas as Red Nose

* Eric Pohlmann as Cable Car Conductor

* Hans Moser as Sigrist

* Louis Wiechert as Christian

* Gerik Schjelderup as Bartorek

* Henrik Jacobsen as Mountain Soldier

* Guido Lorraine as Lieutenant Prachi

Production



Development

Gilliat got the idea for making the film from a newspaper article he read shortly before World War II. He decided it would make a "chase thriller" in the style of films he had written for Alfred Hitchcock and Carol Reed, notably 'The Lady Vanishes' and 'Night Train to Munich'.FILM IN THE MAKING: "State Secret"

Enley, Frank. Sight and Sound; London Vol. 18, Iss. 71, (Fall 1949): 10.


The fictitious "Vosnian" language was constructed for the film by a linguistics expert, combining Latin, Hungarian and Slavic.

The star role went to Douglas Fairbanks Jr., who had made a number of British films in the 1930s and was keen to work in the country again. His casting was announced in May 1949.BY WAY OF REPORT By A. H. WEILER. New York Times 8 May 1949: X5.

Fairbanks later said "We have definitely reached a One World status in pictures. British comedy and character acting do not seem remote to us any more."

In July it was announced that another Hollywood star would play the female lead but by August, actress Glynis Johns got the role.AMERICAN INFLUENCE CHANGING BRITISH FILMS: Native Character Losing Out on Screen Due to Influx of Hollywood Artists By C. A. LEJEUNE New York Times 19 June 1949: X5.Of Local Origin New York Times 20 Aug 1949: 7.

Filming

Filming began in August 1949. Although there was some filming done at Isleworth Studios in London, Gilliat wanted to make as much of the film on location. There was eight weeks on location filming, in Trento and the Dolomites. Trento stood in for the fictitious capital. Filming finished by November 1949.Paulette Goddard May Do 'Cynthia;' Erskine Plans Independent Film

Schallert, Edwin. Los Angeles Times 2 Nov 1949: A7
Round the British Studios

Nepean, Edith. Picture Show; London Vol. 53, Iss. 1391, (Nov 26, 1949): 11.


Fairbanks later said filming was difficult as some in Italy thought the film was anti-communist while others said it was pro-communist, and the film unit had to avoid riots.

Reception



Critical reception

In 'The New York Times', Bosley Crowther wrote, "... this picture is just about as lively as they come, and under Mr. Gilliat's direction, it moves like an auto gaining speed ... Beautifully photographed in Italian cities and in the Italian Dolomites, the whole adventure has the eminent advantage of a sparkling Continental atmosphere. And it also has the advantage of good performance by all concernedby Mr. Fairbanks as the kidnapped surgeon, looking a little like Eugene O'Neill; by Miss Johns, very saucy and explosive, as the music-hall girl; by Jack Hawkins as the Vosnian premier [sic], with an Oxford accent and a Nazi attitude; by Herbert Lom as the Balkan shyster and any number of others in small roles."Crowther, Bosley. [https://www.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9405E2D9133EEF3BBC4D53DFB667838B649EDE "Movie Review: The Great Manhunt, The screen in review; 'State Secret,' Thrilling 'Chase' film with Douglas Fairbanks Jr., bows at Victoria."] 'The New York Times', 5 October 1950. Retrieved: 23 July 2016.

Box office

Trade papers called the film a "notable box office attraction" in British cinemas in 1950.Murphy [https://books.google.com.au/books?id=xtGIAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA209&lpg=PA209&dq=hungry+hill+film+box+office&source=bl&ots=MTsQXadYDw&sig=2h-5aG3Vy4tT_h1mlC4mfRi18JQ&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiZ8b6P1YHMAhVEFqYKHcy9BF8Q6AEIMzAF#v=onepage&q=hungry%20hill%20film%20box%20office&f=false 2003, p. 212] at Google Books It was one of five successful movies from London Films that year, the others being 'The Wooden Horse', 'The Happiest Days of Your Life', 'Odette' and 'Seven Days to Noon'.Watts, Stephen. "London Status quo: Production Remains Subject of Optimism And Gloom..." 'New York Times', 22 October 1950: X5. According to 'Kinematograph Weekly' the 'biggest winners' at the box office in 1950 Britain were 'The Blue Lamp', 'The Happiest Days of Your Life', 'Annie Get Your Gun', 'The Wooden Horse', 'Treasure Island' and 'Odette', with "runners up" being 'Stage Fright', 'White Heat', 'They Were Not Divided', 'Trio', 'Morning Departure', 'Destination Moon', 'Sands of Iwo Jima', 'Little Women', 'The Forsythe Saga', 'Father of the Bride', 'Neptune's Daughter', 'The Dancing Years', 'The Red Light', 'Rogues of Sherwood Forest', 'Fancy Pants', 'Copper Canyon', 'State Secret', 'The Cure for Love', 'My Foolish Heart', 'Stromboli', 'Cheaper by the Dozen', 'Pinky', 'Three Came Home', 'Broken Arrow' and 'Black Rose'.

'State Secret' was less popular in the US but Fairbanks Jr. said "I thought I did my best work ever; Sidney really kept the pot boiling."Bawden and Miller [https://books.google.com.au/books?id=tkKWCwAAQBAJ&pg=PA91&lpg=PA91&dq=douglas+fairbanks+jnr+interview&source=bl&ots=sznr-6GwK5&sig=rBd3jTUJu3MWAem0AMN6Bpii544&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjHxoWNjYnOAhXTNpQKHYrWANY4ChDoAQg0MAQ#v=onepage&q=douglas%20fairbanks%20jnr%20interview&f=false 2016, p. 104], at Google Books

References



Bibliography



* Bawden, James and Ron Miller. 'Conversations with Classic Film Stars: Interviews from Hollywood's Golden Era'. Lexington, Kentucky: University Press of Kentucky, 2016. .

* Murphy, Robert. 'Realism and Tinsel: Cinema and Society in Britain 1939-48'. London: Routledge, 2003, First edition 1992. .


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