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Thread: Ministry Of Fear (1944)

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    Ray Milland
    as Stephen Neale
    Marjorie Reynolds
    as Carla Hilfe
    Carl Esmond
    as Willi Hilfe

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    Posted by Dave G

    I’m a big fan of Ray Milland. He may not have had the greatest range in the world as a leading man, but he had a certain class, deportment, and an easy debonair charm - like a watered-down Cary Grant sans comic timing. Perhaps the most appealing thing about Milland is his role in "Dial M for Murder" – if HE can end up married to Grace Kelly, there’s hope for us all.

    Milland is on solid form in Fritz Lang’s "Ministry of Fear" (from the novel by Graham Greene). The setting is wartime England, and Stephen Neale (Milland) has just been released from an asylum. Determined to reintegrate into society, Neale heads to the local railway station, but before the train to London can arrive, he’s sidetracked by an innocent-looking village fete. It starts out as the stereotypical old-fashioned English event, but gradually evolves into something more sinister: the little old ladies are eager for Neale to visit the fortune teller; she tells him the correct weight to bet at the win-the-cake stall; then shortly after Neale wins it, a surly Dan Duryea turns up, and the little old ladies are suddenly desperate to get their prize back. Thus begins possibly the only film noir in which the MacGuffin is a homemade cake - and it's made with eggs, you know …

    After an exciting, vividly executed footchase and gunfight in the countryside during a German bombing raid, Neale finds himself back in London, and sets about investigating the mysterious group responsible for organizing that strange village fete and nearly getting him killed. Soon he finds himself accused of murder, and plunged into a swirling mystery of deception, Nazi agents and war secrets, all played out among the day-to-day dangers of the Blitz.

    Lang creates a lingering sense of dread throughout, as Neale moves alone through the foggy, bombed-out streets of London, uncovering a secret enemy network hidden beneath the veneer of respectable society. He can’t approach the police, because of his criminal record, and everyone he meets is a potential enemy - even the beautiful and resourceful Carla Hilfe (Marjorie Reynolds), who becomes his chief ally. I liked the way her character was written; even as Neale grew closer to her, I wasn’t quite sure where her true allegiances lay.



    The psychological state of Milland’s character is hinted at from the outset at the asylum, but only explored in a couple of scenes later on; chiefly that in which Neale, caught in an air-raid and forced to a shelter with Carla, confesses the reason for his incarceration in an asylum: his terminally ill wife committed suicide with poison that Neale had reluctantly bought. Under the circumstances, he was sent to an asylum instead of prison, and is clearly still haunted by the incident. Beyond this, we don’t get a great deal more insight into his psyche – something which might add depth to the movie. This was one of the few aspects of the film I found disappointing – another being the tacked-on, utterly superficial ‘happy ending’ scene which closes it.

    Those caveats aside, I found this to be top-notch entertainment, with many memorable scenes, including a creepy, highly atmospheric fake séance. It’s well-played by the principal cast – including that deliciously slimy villain Dan Duryea, whose role here is unfortunately limited. Audiences would have to wait until "Woman in the Window" and "Scarlet Street" for Lang to make full use of Duryea’s talents.

    Posted 19th June 2006

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    Outfit boss cigar joe's Avatar
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    Default Ministry Of Fear (1944)

    Director: Fritz Lang, Writers: Seton I. Miller (screenplay), Graham Greene (novel). Starring Ray Milland, Marjorie Reynolds. Dan Duryea, Hillary Brooke, and Carl Esmond.




    This whole film has a sort of stylistically surreal/cheap quality to it, in part because its all studio bound, and it also has a plethora of interesting characters in minor parts one notably for me was Hilary Brooke who was imprinted upon me as a child from the numerous Abbott & Costello TV show episodes where she was a regular. She makes a stunning entrance as a Spiritualist. Dan Duryea has some memorable appearances also. None of this detracts from the film.

    Brooke



    Duryea



    Storyline:

    The film opens on a ticking clock in a dark room and then to Steven Neal (Milland) sitting at a table. Tick tock tick tock. He's waiting for 12:00 when he will be released from an asylum where he has been for two years for the mercy killing of his terminal wife. And he is released into WWII England, but it doesn't seem so normal on the outside either.

    He stumbles upon a carvival/charity bazaar where the patrons seem a bit off and downright loony, and he wins a cake at the advise of a fortune teller, which he takes back with him on the train to London. His companion in the train compartment is a blind man who is not what he seems. Neal doesn't quite know who to turn to or who to trust. Some very nice stylistic cinematography from Lang

    Fortune Teller & Milland



    The Blind Man



    This film has a final denouement that was homaged in one of the last of the great Spaghetti Westerns Keoma (1976) and also by the Cohen Brothers in the Neo Noir Blood Simple (1984)

    Very interesting addition to a Noir library, one of the first Noirs filmed during WWII 7/10

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    [review from April 3, 2011]

    Based on a Graham Greene novel, a "wrong man" spy thriller very much in the vein of Hitchcock, or Lang's previous Spione. Calling this noir is a big stretch, but it's a fun little adventure that moves briskly and keeps you guessing. Ray Milland is good, the rest of the cast a little uninspiring but they manage. Pretty lousy score, but some mighty fine camerawork... not as spectacular as Lang's best, but definitely gets the job done. A couple of minor disappointments: at first it seems like there might be more of a psychological angle but it's quickly explained away, and a lame coda with a dumb bit of a comedy. Overall, slight but very enjoyable. Rating: 7

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    it is a big stretch, but hell, according to Blackout: World War II and the Origins of Film Noir by Sheri Chinen Biesen this and Street of Chance were the first two Hollywood productions seriously effected by WWII rationing and blackout regulations.

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    Just as this is not a propaganda film, it isn’t a puzzle film either. It’s a nightmare film, pure and simple. Armour objects to a scene near the film’s climax in which a tailor, played with uncharacteristic but altogether deliberate blandness by Dan Duryea (Lang’s future sleazebag in 1944’s The Woman in the Window and the next year’s ineffableScarlet Street), “dials a number on the phone with a gigantic pair of tailor’s scissors, so large they are ludicrous.” Well, exactly. Ludicrous and horrifying.
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    Nice piece on Ministry of Fear from critic Glenn Kenny

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