Berlin Correspondent

Berlin Correspondent

1942 "He Lived Thru A Nazi Nightmare You'll Never Forget!"
Berlin Correspondent
Berlin Correspondent

Berlin Correspondent

6.2 | 1h10m | en | Drama

Dana Andrews plays Bill Roberts, an American radio commentator station in Berlin in the months before Pearl Harbor. Having witnessed Nazi brutalities first hand, Roberts hopes to alert his listeners of impending dangers, and does so by sending out coded messages during his broadcasts. The Gestapo begins to suspect something and assigns glamorous secret agent Karen Hauen (Virginia Gilmore) to spy on Roberts. When she discovers that her own father (Erwin Kaiser) is supplying Roberts with vital secrets, she turns her back on the Nazis and joins our hero in his efforts.

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6.2 | 1h10m | en | Drama , Thriller | More Info
Released: August. 17,1942 | Released Producted By: 20th Century Fox , Country: Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

Dana Andrews plays Bill Roberts, an American radio commentator station in Berlin in the months before Pearl Harbor. Having witnessed Nazi brutalities first hand, Roberts hopes to alert his listeners of impending dangers, and does so by sending out coded messages during his broadcasts. The Gestapo begins to suspect something and assigns glamorous secret agent Karen Hauen (Virginia Gilmore) to spy on Roberts. When she discovers that her own father (Erwin Kaiser) is supplying Roberts with vital secrets, she turns her back on the Nazis and joins our hero in his efforts.

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Cast

Virginia Gilmore , Dana Andrews , Mona Maris

Director

Virgil Miller

Producted By

20th Century Fox ,

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JohnHowardReid Executive producer: Dore Schary. Copyright 6 May 1948 by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc. New York opening at the Victoria: 20 May 1948. U.S. release: May 1948. U.K. release: 18 October 1948. Australian release: 17 February 1949. 7,893 feet. 87 minutes.SYNOPSIS: Underground Nazis are hunted in post-war Germany.COMMENT: Actually photographed in Frankfurt and Berlin (by authorization of the British, Soviet and U.S. authorities), this taut, exciting, suspenseful thriller has a director who knows how to get the atmospheric best out of his stark and striking natural locations. Moody lighting is a great help too - and so is the ironic background commentary, rarely obtrusive and often neatly counterpointing what occurs on the screen. Tourneur's direction is highly inventive - the characters introduced as the camera tracks along the outside of the train's compartments, the clown toppling into the camera - and he is well served by his cast: Merle Oberon has little to do, though she is a graceful actress and it is pleasing that she does not get involved in any romantic cliches; Robert Ryan is ideally cast, bringing some depth to a part that could easily have been turned into either a foolish caricature or just a walking mouthpiece for philosophic ideals; Charles Korvin has a difficult role, but he and the director have chosen the easy way out by keeping him in the background; Paul Lukas plays with his usual easy authority and assurance; Robert Coote essays the stage Englishman, but with some restraint; former Hollywood director Reinhold Schunzel plays a traitorous friend with convincing weariness and passion; Roman Toporow is a little green as the Russian lieutenant, but this suits the part; Peter Von Zerneck plays the clown with style; Otto Waldis has a small part but he turns it into the film's most memorable portrayal, spitting out revolutionary lines with the spellbinding skill of a satanic demagogue. Even the minor roles are enacted with unobtrusive artistry - Michael Harvey as a phoney sergeant, Charles McGraw as the interrogating officer. Siodmak evidently wrote his story to utilize the actual German locations to the utmost, with every twist in the plot bringing in a new background, as well as piling suspense on suspense. Tourneur handles the action episodes with as much skill and unobtrusive yet exciting authority as he brings to the dialogue and documentary scenes. Other credits are likewise skilled-the music score is unpretentiously effective and the art direction is quite striking. Production values are A-1. OTHER VIEWS: Exciting direction and excellent photography in a neat thriller that tries a little too hard to stress its political message.
Jim Mullen Tate (TheFearmakers) Martin Kosleck est known or recognized by movie fans as the red-herring windmill resident replacement in Alfred Hitchcock's classic, FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT, and unlike that memorable, sparse yet important cameo, he's pretty much the entire vehicle for this particular CORRESPONDENT made two years later, only now we're on his home turf during, not before, The Second World War: BERLIN, Germany against American Dana Andrews, with a pencil thin mustache usually given to Silent Movie villains, playing the most intrepid role by mere introduction... A New York broadcast telling America the names of all overseas Correspondents, ranging from men working in England to Holland, which sound like soft jobs as opposed to where Dana's Bill Roberts works, reading what seems like German-written propaganda about their side of things, but with secret coded adjectives, he gets through to his newspaper back home, and, despite acting permanently teflon, like some kind of one-dimensional comic book hero (not one of Andrews' best roles), with the severity of his job, the attitude fits: especially in a feel-good wartime programmer.She doesn't know anything, and stuck in a cold, heartless romance with intense Nazi Captain von Rau, played by Martin Kosleck, she's actually in the most danger since he's the scariest character. But like all good actors, there's a vulnerable side that sheds wan light through an otherwise steely countenance. With his severe looks, though, it's not easy to pull off being all that friendly.Kosleck, who'd play sinister Germans throughout his career, owns the picture for more than his narrowed-eyes wielding an intense, soulless reflection of The Furor's agenda. While Andrews' story revs up, taking verbal shots at The Third Reich in an obvious attempt to make Hitler seem like the type of clown Charlie Chaplin portrayed in THE GREAT DICTATOR, the sole heavy, by standing firm and playing the role with unbridled fervor while still remaining alert and controlled, is the centerpiece - even as Andrews eventually becomes a more physical hero, and gets deeper into trouble - from a last minute race-against-time attempt to save his girl involving a psycho ward and then his own hopeful prison escape - our edgy German spotlight is the reason that anyone fears anything at all: In short, Kosleck has the job of embodying the entire Nazi Party.
MartinHafer "Berlin Correspondent" is set just before the United States entered World War II. Bill Roberts (Dana Andrews) is an American news correspondent and it's pretty obvious he hates Nazi Germany, which is where he's been stationed. The Nazis heavily censor his news broadcasts...yet somehow information about the Nazis seems to sneak out...and they suspect Bill is up to something. Eventually they learn his secret but instead of just being tossed out of the country, the Nazis have other plans for him.Despite having Dana Andrews in the picture, this is a pretty unremarkable film. The Nazis are almost all stupid as well as evil...and Bill is able to trick them again and again because of this. If only the Nazis were this dumb! Overall, a decent time- passer but not much more. And, by the way, oddly the Germans almost all sound just like Americans!
gordonl56 BERLIN CORRESPONDENT 1942This a 20th Century Fox film is another of the wartime flag wavers that flooded the theatres during World War Two. This stars, Dana Andrews, Virginia Gilmore, Mona Maris, Erwin Kaiser, Martin Kosleck, Sig Ruman and Henry Rowland.It starts in November 1941, Andrews, an American radio correspondent, sends out valuable espionage information during his daily broadcasts from Berlin. This is annoying the Nazi types to no end. They want to know where he is getting this info and plug the leak. Gestapo colonel Martin Kosleck (in another of his great Nazi roles) assigns his best agents to follow the man. Andrews though always manages to give the slip to his shadows. He then meets with his German contact for the German intelligence information. Kosleck has finally reached the end of his tether with Andrews evading his tails. He assigns his girlfriend, Virginia Gilmore to keep tabs of the American. This she does rather quickly by posing as a woman in distress. Andrews, being ever so gallant, helps Gilmore cover a café bill. The smooth talking Yank soon has a date lined up with the pretty Gilmore. Of course the man has no idea this is all a plan laid out by Gestapo man, Kosleck. Now the plot thickens as Andrews' underground contact turns out to be Miss Gilmore's father. The man, Erwin Kaiser, hates the Nazis and wants to help in their defeat. The info he gathers is from Gilmore who thinks it is all just table talk she got from boyfriend Kosleck.Anyways, after a couple of dates with Andrews, Gilmore discovers that the information he receives is written in invisible ink on stamps. He buys these from a local shop where Kaiser happens to frequent. The Nazis raid the place and soon are pounding on Kaiser's and daughter Gilmore's door. Gilmore now realizes that she has inadvertently turned her father in. She now only wants to help her father.As the Gestapo burst in, Kaiser starts yelling at Gilmore calling her a cow for turning him in. This causes Kosleck and the Gestapo swine to believe that Gilmore is still a loyal Nazi. (Seen this plot twist at least a dozen times in various films)Kosleck soon has Kaiser in a cell receiving some "gentle" questioning. Kaiser refuses to talk and is soon set to an insane sanatorium. There he will of course be found dead of some accident or some such thing. Gilmore, at wits end, seeks out Andrews to help save her father. Now there is a whole series of somewhat over the top heroics by Andrews. He dresses up like a German officer and visits the sanatorium. He needless to say soon springs the old man and smuggles him over the border for some time with the Swiss. Matters take a turn for the worse for Andrews as December 7th has rolled around. Germany stands with her Japanese ally and Andrews is grabbed up and tossed into a concentration camp. There are some more bits of daring do and the likes before Andrews and Gilmore are winging it out of the country in a stolen aircraft. This is a typical early war propaganda flag waver with the dashing hero getting away from the enemy. (this time with a girl) With only a 70 minute runtime it moves along quickly enough. The German's being played as complete morons in every film of this type is starting to get a bit long in the tooth. One starts to wonder how they ever took over all of Europe. It is still worth a look as a decent example of the genre.The film was directed by regular Charlie Chan helmsman, Eugene Forde. One time Oscar nominated, Virgil Miller is the director of photography.Some will recall Sig Ruman from his role in STALAG 17 as the German guard, Sgt Schulz.