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| CONFIDENTIAL
AGENT (director: Herman
Shumlin; screenwriters: Robert
Buckner/Jack Daniel/based on the novel by Graham
Greene; cinematographer: James Wong
Howe; editor: George Amy; music: Franz
Waxman; cast: Charles Boyer (Denard), Lauren
Bacall (Rose Cullen), Katina Paxinou (Mrs. Melandez),
Peter Lorre (Contreras), Victor Francen (Licata),
George Coulouris (Captain Currie), Wanda
Hendrix (Else), John
Warburton (Forbes), Dan Seymour (Mr.
Muckerji), Miles Mander (Brigstock
), Ian Wolfe (Dr. Bellows),
George Zucco (Inspector Geddes),
Guy Bellis (Butler), Art Foster (Chauffeur),
Holmes Herbert (Lord Benditch);
Runtime: 118; MPAA Rating: NR; producer: Robert
Buckner; Warner Brothers; 1945) "No sizzle." Reviewed
by Dennis Schwartz It's
based on a Graham Greene novel,
and is written by Robert
Buckner and Jack Daniel. Theater
director Herman Shumlin ("Watch on the Rhine"), with
well-known leftist leanings, in his second and last
film he ever directed, gets no sizzle from co-star Lauren
Bacall, unconvincingly cast despite her Bronx
accent as the daughter of an English lord, after
her smashing film debut in To Have
and Have Not (1944) opposite Bogie.
But the film looks good courtesy of cinematographer
James Wong Howe, was
well-acted by the talented cast and had a tingle
to its sinister spy theme of people living in
fear that still keeps it fresh and relevant.
Because of the film's depiction of Spain as a
Fascist country still at war with Loyalists, it
did not catch the interest of the public, still
living through their own war experience and too
war-weary to concern itself with another part of
the world's problems. Therefore the film
unfortunately bombed at the box office in the
West and did not receive too many good reviews
from critics, but when viewed today it has
gained in reputation over the years. I thought
it was an enjoyable classic thriller, made with
insight and intelligence. The author Greene
liked the film best of all the screen
adaptations of his novels, and even liked
Bacall's performance (I thought it was solid,
not great). It's
set in 1937, in England, where the Spanish Loyalists
send an aging world-weary Spanish
classical musician Denard (Charles Boyer),
whose wife and daughter were executed by
the Fascists, to
sabotage a valuable coal mining
business deal with the Brits which if
finalized would allow the Fascist
Spanish government to buy munitions
during the Spanish Civil War to be
used against the Loyalists. The
chief villains, Peter Lorre and Katina Paxinou, give
nasty performances as detestable heavies and
sell-outs, and the other villains Victor
Francen, Miles Mander, George
Coulouris, Guy Bellis and Art Foster show
what amateur agent Boyer is up against in his
dangerous mission.
While Bacall plays the spirited daughter of
coal tycoon Lord Benditch (Holmes Herbert), who
falls in love with the dashing Boyer after giving him
a lift in her car at the train station, and later
enlists the help of her wealthy aristocratic
businessman boyfriend John Warburton to help get
the besieged Boyer out of the country after the
reluctant agent succeeds in his mission of blocking
the coal deal by giving an impassioned speech to the
hostile Brit coal miners at Benditch.
The miners are more interested in
jobs than politics, but respect a fellow worker's
plea for them to at least hear what he has to say.
The newspaper headlines the next day force the
cancellation of the deal. REVIEWED ON 9/13/2012 GRADE: B Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ |