Elsa Carrington
Madeleine Carroll
Elsa Carrington

“Dead Women Tell No Tales Was The Motto of This Charming Lady Killer!”
During World War I, a novelist declared dead is recruited by British intelligence and sent to Switzerland under a new identity to assassinate a German spy. Teamed with a fellow agent posing as his wife and an eccentric assassin known as “the General,” the trio close in on their target — until two of them grow ambivalent when their duty to the mission clashes with their consciences.
Elsa Carrington
Madeleine Carroll
Elsa Carrington
Richard Ashenden / Edgar Brodie
John Gielgud
Richard Ashenden / Edgar Brodie
The General
Peter Lorre
The General
Robert Marvin
Robert Young
Robert Marvin
Caypor
Percy Marmont
Caypor
Mrs. Caypor
Florence Kahn
Mrs. Caypor
"R"
Charles Carson
"R"
Lilli
Lilli Palmer
Lilli
Man (uncredited)
Denys Blakelock
Man (uncredited)
Man (uncredited)
Sebastian Cabot
Man (uncredited)
Colonel Anderson (uncredited)
Tom Helmore
Colonel Anderson (uncredited)
Manager (uncredited)
Andreas Malandrinos
Manager (uncredited)
John Gielgud charmingly portrays the novelist-cum-officer dragooned by the British spy service into travelling to Switzerland on the trail of a Nazi spy. He is assigned two assistants - a rather naive, but keen, Madeleine Carroll "Elsa" and a suitable sleazy, but lethal, Peter Lorre "as The General". Their first attempt to fulfil their mission goes awry somewhat, as they dispatch the wrong person. It is at this point their consciences start to kick in and they question the morals of their mission - particularly when they actually do discover the identity of the enemy secret agent. Hitchcock and Charles Bennett adapt the Somerset Maugham story with plenty of attention to the detail and the characterisation; the direction is taut and the suspense on the train towards the end keep this enthralling.
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