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Movie
Foreign Correspondent
Synopsis
Fourteen scriptwriters spent five years toiling over a movie adaptation of war correspondent Vincent Sheehan's Personal History before producer Walter Wanger brought the property to the screen as Foreign Correspondent. What emerged was approximately 2 parts Sheehan and 8 parts director Alfred Hitchcock--and what's wrong with that? Joel McCrea stars as an American journalist sent by his newspaper to cover the volatile war scene in Europe in the years 1938 to 1940. He has barely arrived in Holland before he witnesses the assassination of Dutch diplomat Albert Basserman: at least, that's what he thinks he sees. McCrea makes the acquaintance of peace-activist Herbert Marshall, his like-minded daughter Laraine Day, and cheeky British secret agent George Sanders. A wild chase through the streets of Amsterdam, with McCrea dodging bullets, leads to the classic "alternating windmills" scene, which tips Our Hero to the existence of a formidable subversive organization. McCrea returns to England, where he nearly falls victim to the machinations of jovial hired-killer Edmund Gwenn. The leader of the spy ring is revealed during the climactic plane-crash sequence--which, like the aforementioned windmill scene, is a cinematic tour de force for director Hitchcock and cinematographer Rudolph Mate. Producer Wanger kept abreast of breaking news events all through the filming of Foreign Correspondent, enabling him to keep the picture as "hot" as possible: the final scene, with McCrea broadcasting to a "sleeping" America from London while Nazi bombs drop all around him, was filmed only a short time after the actual London blitz. The script was co-written by Robert Benchley, who has a wonderful supporting role as an eternally tippling newsman. Foreign Correspondent was Alfred Hitchcock's second American film, and remained one of his (and his fans') personal favorites.
Cast
- Joel McCrea
- Laraine Day
- George Sanders
- Herbert Marshall
- Edmund Gwenn
- Albert Basserman
- Robert Benchley
- Harry Davenport
- Eduardo Ciannelli
- Barbara Pepper
- Martin Kosleck
- Eddie Conrad
- Charles Wagenheim
- Crauford Kent
- Frances Carson
- Alexander Granach
- Sam Adams
- Dorothy Vaughan
- Betty Bradley
- Mary Young
- Jack Rice
- Jackie McGee
- Henry Blair
- Rebecca Bohannen
- Marten Lamont
- Barry Bernard
- Hilda Plowright
- Gertrude W. Hoffman
- June Novak
- Ted Offenbecker
- Roy Gordon
- Bert White
- Thomas Pogue
- Jack Voglin
- George French
- William Stelling
- John Meredith
- George Cathrey
- Leonard Mudie
- Holmes Herbert
- Frederick Sewall
- Emory Parnell
- James Finlayson
- Hermina Milar
- Loulette Sablon
- Douglas Gordon
- Colin Kenny
- Paul Sutton
- Robert C. Fischer
- Jack Dawson
- Ken Christy
- Horace B. Carpenter
- Thomas Mizer
- June Heiden
- Terry Kilburn
- Hans von Morhart
- Otto Hoffman
- George B. French
- John George
- Charles Halton
- Joan Leslie
- Paul Irving
- Ferris Taylor
- John T. Murray
- Harry Depp
- Ted Mapes
- Meeka Aldrich
- Willy Castello
- Bill Gavier
- Jane Novak
- Ian Wolfe
- Ernie Stanton
- Donald Stuart
- Helena Phillips Evans
- Herbert Evans
- Harry Semels
- Frank Benson
- Barbara Boudwin
- Louis Borell
- Gino Corrado
- William Yetter Jr.
- Elspeth Dudgeon
- Gwendolyn Logan
- Eily Malyon
- Bunny Beatty
- John Burton
- George Offerman
- Raymond Severn
- Lawrence Osman
- Richard Hammond
- Joe O'Brien
- Billy Bester
- Billy Horn
- Ronald Brown
- Louise Brien
- Jack Alfred
- George Offerman Jr.
- E.E. Clive
- Alfred Hitchcock
- Wheaton Chambers
- Albert Bassermann
- Gertrude Hoffman
- Rudolph Maté
- Norman Pringle
- Walter Reynolds
- Lee Zavitz
- William Cameron Menzies
- Frank Maher
- James Hilton
- Richard Maibaum
- Dorothy Spencer
- Ben Hecht
- Robert Benchley
- Alexander Golitzen
- Paul Eagler
- Joan Harrison
- Otho Lovering
- Charles Bennett