Suzanne Mallison
Claire Bloom
Suzanne Mallison

“Terror! Vice! Violence! He stopped at nothing!”
A British woman on a visit to post-war Berlin is caught up in an espionage ring smuggling secrets into and out of the Eastern Bloc.
Suzanne Mallison
Claire Bloom
Suzanne Mallison
Ivo Kern
James Mason
Ivo Kern
Bettina
Hildegard Knef
Bettina
Martin Mallison
Geoffrey Toone
Martin Mallison
Lizzi
Hilde Sessak
Lizzi
Halendar
Aribert Wäscher
Halendar
Olaf Kastner
Ernst Schröder
Olaf Kastner
Horst
Dieter Krause
Horst
Inspector Kleiber
Karl John
Inspector Kleiber
Opera singer
Ljuba Welitsch
Opera singer
Kolldehoff EaEasstern German Police Officer commanding the hunt for Ivo Kern and Susanne Mallison (uncredited)
Reinhard Kolldehoff
Kolldehoff EaEasstern German Police Officer commanding the hunt for Ivo Kern and Susanne Mallison (uncredited)
Construction Worker on Generator (uncredited)
Frederick Schiller
Construction Worker on Generator (uncredited)
Very much in the vein of Carol Reed's similar cold war thriller "The Third Man" (1949), this is a gritty and characterful story set in Berlin just before the Soviet Union imposed travel restrictions. This time, the Communists kidnap "Susanne" (Claire Bloom) - she happens to be the sister of British officer "Martin" (Geoffrey Toone) and we are now presented with an intriguing and internecine series of spy and counter-spy scenarios that revolve around the dubious "Ivo" (James Mason) with whom the missing woman had been associating with - and has fallen for. It transpires that she is being held so that they can use her as leverage for the return of "Kastner" (Ernst Schröder), a lawyer with a distinctly dodgy pre-war past. It now falls to "Ivo" to rescue her and smuggle her to safety. Desmond Dickinson's dark and eery photography - especially in what's left of the heavily bombed out Berlin - coupled with a seedy and effective John Addison score work well to create an atmospheric environment. I didn't love Mason's rather unreliable German accent, but Bloom is quite effective and there are compensating and strong supporting contributions from an on-form Hildegard Knef ("Bettina") and from Aribert Wäscher as the untrustworthy "Halendar" as the plot twists and turns towards quite a menacing and tightly shot denouement. The narrative is tight, the romance sparing, it is frequently quite compelling to watch and it does have a ring of plausibility to it. A superior crime drama well worth a watch.
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