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Saboteur

Saboteur (1942)

April. 24,1942
|
7.1
|
NR
| Thriller Mystery

Aircraft factory worker Barry Kane flees across the United States after he is wrongly accused of starting the fire that killed his best friend.

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Taraparain
1942/04/24

Tells a fascinating and unsettling true story, and does so well, without pretending to have all the answers.

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Allison Davies
1942/04/25

The film never slows down or bores, plunging from one harrowing sequence to the next.

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Loui Blair
1942/04/26

It's a feast for the eyes. But what really makes this dramedy work is the acting.

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Fatma Suarez
1942/04/27

The movie's neither hopeful in contrived ways, nor hopeless in different contrived ways. Somehow it manages to be wonderful

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cinemajesty
1942/04/28

"Saboteur", the fifth movie to be directed by Alfred Hitchcock since he had entered the Hollywood System by the age of 40 with his first picture for an U.S. American production company, the Psycho-Drama "Rebecca" (1940), which earned hiring Producer David O. Selznick and his self-founded and owned company Selznick International Pictures Inc. an Academy Award for Best Picture on February 27th 1941 and ten additional Academy Award nominations with one further win for Black & White Cinematography by George Barnes.This picture can not hold up in creativity, performing qualities nor technical execution against the mystical psychologically twisting "Rebecca" (1940); too pale-looking come along the leading actors Priscilla Lane and Robert Cummings as a Stockholm-Syndrome practicing couple on the 3,000 miles run through Northern America to end up confronting the title given factory-and-ship-blowing man Frank Fry, performed by the 1914-born actor Norman Lloyd, on the top on the Statue of Liberty in order to struggle to freedom, by watching the character of Fry fall to death on Ellis Island.The straight-forward story had been handled in professional manner as usual by Director Alfred Hitchcock, giving a clear determined view on the human spirit of survival, by letting his leading character of Kane live through stages of tramping, imprisonment, receiving blind man amenities, police-misleading coverage by traveling circus companions and ultimately get led magically high society officials to a charity ball in Manhattan, New York City where Kane concludes unfinished business with the rich and power-hungry character of Charles Tobin, portrayed by an ease-spreading yet battle-seeking actor Otto Kruger in the most defined part of "Saboteur".Nevertheless Universal Pictures had been satisfied with Director Alfred Hitchcock's effort on the film, providing him with the production budget for "The Shadow of a Doubt" in consequence, where the director finally found the production scale, a contradicting cast throughout and mind-binding thrilling plot twists to present, as more to say make himself to the master of suspense, completely overstepped by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS) in a Nomination for Best Director in the year 1944.© 2017 Felix Alexander Dausend (Cinemajesty Entertainments LLC)

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edalweber
1942/04/29

I personally think that the cast is excellent including Bob CUMMINGS AND Priscilla LANE I think that they both are very believable.Perhaps the most interesting part of the movie is the Frank Capraesque scene in the carnival caravan where the freaks hold a town hall meeting in miniature to decide whether or not to turn Cummings over to the authorities. the idea is that in a democracy we don't automatically assume that the authorities are always right. we should study the matter and decide by majority vote what to do. Everyone is willing except the nasty midget, probably a parody of Hitler, including a mustache. Hitler having a midget character though not body. he is small in every other way. since this is a democracy run by the people Cummings is given the benefit of the doubt and allowed to pursue his Quest to prove his innocence

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ElMaruecan82
1942/04/30

Indeed, after having ventured in the atmosphere of early Hitchcock's movies and an anachronistic oddity titled "Under Capricorn", "Saboteur" provided me the same satisfaction an explorer who trotted over the globe for months would feel when crossing the threshold of his home. I missed the good old Hitchcock format to the point of homesickness and when the spinning Earth of Universal Pictures introduced that opening credits with a weird linear background and the ominous shadow of the titular "Saboteur", I knew I was swimming in familiar water, I enjoyed every moment of the 1942 thriller, and forgave every flaw.Yes, there were flaws, the plots was written by three persons and I suspect they never met to get all their ducks in a row, but the action is so fast-paced and Hitchcock's directing so insolently confident that you savor every bit of this Swiss-cheese-like plot. They say Hitchcock was a Master of Suspense, I think he was hiding a subtler talent under his sleeve: he knew how to make you not notice the flaws. The action sequences, , the uses of ellipses and smash cuts, everything were so efficient that noticing a few weaknesses in the script would make you look nit-picky (not that all his films could got away with it)."Saboteur" opens with a sabotage of spectacular effect, a hatched-face guy named Fry bumped into two aircraft workers, one of them is Barry, played by Robert Cummings (and not Dana Andrews). Barry has enough time to check the name on a postcard. A few minutes later, a fire starts and Fry gives him an extinguisher, Barry's friend wants to take part to the action, ignoring that the extinguisher is filled with gasoline. Hitchcock gratifies with the death of a man literally eaten up by flames and falling like a burnt match. Now, this is an opening. What follows is pure Hitch stuff, Barry is the suspect number one because he handed the fatal extinguisher and naturally, there's no worker named Fry.Mistaken identities is one of Hitchcock's darling and it's handled quite efficiently in "Saboteur" as Barry's identity is often the cause of misleading tricks with both the right and wrong side of the law, and can even be looked at the whole theme of the movie, which is about the fifth columnist threatening the United States' interests during the War. Indeed, "Saboteur" can't be taken outside of its context, the decisive incident happens in the temple of the war effort after all. But the mistaken identity emphasizes the interesting contrast between the good guys and the villains, obviously. Those who trust Barry are all average Joes, down-on-their-luck, from the people, while the bad guys are very unlikely figures, a gentle grandfather played by Otto Kruger and a socialite played by Alma Kruger (no relation).One would think the film has a point to make about American values, and he would be right. During his road trip, Barry meets many archetypes of American society and these are opportunities for some grandiloquent speeches about democracy. Some are pretty well-written and I must say I have drank like little milk the lines delivered by Vaughan Masser, the blind host. Some others, as well-intended as they were, were too preachy. When Barry and Pat (Prscilla Lane) ask the circus troop workers for help, the Skeleton Man proposes a vote, when the midget protests, he's called 'fascist', which was a pretty bold answer. But then again, if the man was so eager to save them, why didn't he just help them? Is it better to make a bad decision democratically than a noble one tyrannically? kind of makes you think.I understand the context forced Hitchcock to inject some inspirational moments in his film, like he did in "Loveboat", but this aspect was almost contradicted by the way the real folks behaved, the agents of FBI, the navy yard guards, all so conveniently incompetent, enough not to spot the bad guys or to arrest the wrong one… so much for democracy. One would rather accept Barry's punchy methods, after all, it's not like he trusted the justice of his country and handed himself to the Law. You're never really sure what Hitch's point is, and maybe this is the film's slight edge over "Lifeboat". The Master gives the villain many shining moments, they sing to Tchaikov' music in a car, the suave villain a speech of his own and talk about "mass morons", and even say bout totalitarian regimes that "they get things done", and ironically, this is what the hero does, getting things done with the villains' methods.Despite these contradictions, the film lets itself being enjoyed, one scene after another, Hitchcock showcases his capability to provide memorable moments, a shootout in a Radio City theater with real shotguns heard in the movies, where the suspense lies on the moment the audience will realize what's going on, a paper with a message for help flying over the sky and last but not least, the Statue of Liberty's climax. What a fitting demise for the villain who sinned by fire to die at the altar of the Liberty torch. Yet even Hitchcock acknowledged a flaw: everyone wanted the villain to die. He wouldn't commit the same mistake in "North by Northwest", but what a satisfying ending.As Fry, Norman Lloyd, without being the most memorable Hitchcok villain is the one whose face leaves the most vivid impact, and this is saying a lot in a film where they're a group of intimidating people. So we have memorable villains, a dark and handsome hero, mistaken for a killer, running afoul of the Law to prove his innocence and meeting in the process a beautiful blonde, car chases, last-minute escapes, bomb explosions, breath suspended as often as disbelief, and a climactic sequence taking place in the most unexpected and spectacular setting. I needed my fix of Hitchcock, and I got it with "Saboteur".

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ofpsmith
1942/05/01

Alfred Hitchcock made a lot of films where an innocent person get's into some big trouble. In Saboteur we see our hero, factory worker Barry Kane (Robert Cummings) run across the country after being accused of the murder of his coworker. Along with Pat Martin (Priscilla Lane) Barry has to prove his innocence and prevent the next sabotage effort. Yeah, Barry's friend was killed by sabotage. This film bares a lot of similarities to North by Northwest and The 39 Steps both also by Hitchcock. This is a great film like all Hitchcock films. I recommend Saboteur to any Hitchcock fan or anyone who likes good movies in general. It's suspenseful, it's enthralling, and it's a lot of fun.

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