Night Boat to Dublin

Night Boat to Dublin

1946 ""
Night Boat to Dublin
Night Boat to Dublin

Night Boat to Dublin

6.2 | 1h40m | NR | en | Thriller

British intelligence officers head off a Nazi plot to kidnap an atomic scientist.

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6.2 | 1h40m | NR | en | Thriller | More Info
Released: January. 08,1946 | Released Producted By: Associated British Picture Corporation , Country: United Kingdom Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

British intelligence officers head off a Nazi plot to kidnap an atomic scientist.

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Cast

Robert Newton , Raymond Lovell , Guy Middleton

Director

Otto Heller

Producted By

Associated British Picture Corporation ,

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Reviews

JohnHowardReid I first made the acquaintance of Lawrence Huntington's Night Boat to Dublin on its first release in 1946. I've since reviewed the film another four or five times. On each occasion, this suspenseful spy drama has stood up exceedingly well to re-examination. Huntington's direction is imaginatively forceful, Otto Heller's lighting photography resourcefully noirish. Production values are lavish. While the script incorporates plenty of action, it moves at a commendably fast clip and, most importantly, features some really outstanding performances.In the leading role, Robert Newton makes playing the part of a British agent who is playing the part of playing a part (!) look easy. While Newton accomplishes this astonishing feat with admirable ease, some of the supporting actors lag not too far behind, particularly Joan Maude as the artist, Raymond Lovell as the spy, John Ruddock as his cohort, Leslie Dwyer as a too-shrewd steward, Brenda Bruce as his vampish shrew of a wife, and Muriel Pavlow as the refugee.
Leofwine_draca NIGHT BOAT TO DUBLIN is a fun spy thriller that must have been shot in the dying days of World War 2. Espionage and its deadly results are the name of the game here, as the British authorities pursue a Nazi organisation running out of Ireland and in particular aim to rescue a kidnapped Swedish scientist who may have the secret to unlocking the atomic bomb. Half of the action is centred around the titular ship, with plenty of cloak and dagger shenanigans to pass the time.And this film certainly passes the time well enough, coming across as fast paced and with just the right level of suspense to see it through. There's an early plot twist to rival PSYCHO and a delightfully urbane villain in the form of the charming Raymond Lovell, who has a real ball with the part. The sneaking around in hotel room material is good fun, too, and Robert Newton is a British hero in the finest stiff-upper-lip tradition. A triumvirate of Herbert Lom, Marius Goring, and Leslie Dwyer flesh out villainous parts, and the action-packed climax is delightful.
robert-temple-1 This film, issued in 1946, may have had some last minute plot changes made to it, as I suspect it was written and planned before the War actually ended. There is still a ring of Nazi agents at work in this film, but the War is now over and the Nazis have become an international organisation trying to steal the secrets of the atomic bomb and sell them to other hostile powers or organisations. (This is not unlike the scare stories still prominent in today's newspapers on a weekly basis, though the villains who threaten to destroy us all are constantly changing, it seems.) 'The Irish Free State' is still a bogey in the film, where the Nazis feel very much at home, which shows how embittered the British were at the so-called 'neutrality' of Ireland during the War. Hence the many trips on the night boat to Ireland which occur in this story. Unlike real ferry journeys across the Irish Sea, which can be horribly rough crossings, all of these take place on a flat sea without any waves. Funny that! Robert Newton in a slouch hat is the lead player, and the look of whimsy on his face is not always appropriate for moments of high tension. Wilfred Hyde Whyte has a few seconds on screen as an eccentric taxi driver. Herbert Lom has a few scenes as one of the Nazis, as does Marius Goring. The issue of this film on DVD is a pleasure to watch, because it has been taken from a perfectly preserved negative, rather than some battered old print, and the images are as crisp as the day they were made. Many of the period aspects of this film are amusing and interesting to watch, especially those featuring trains and railyards. The manners of the time never cease to be fascinating, and even the Nazis are polite as they stick a gun in your side and say they deeply regret that they will have to kill you. Brenda Bruce has a scene as a shrieking harridan who wants to go out and have a good time and nobody is going to stop her, especially not her older husband, Leslie Dwyer, a steward who has been paid for doing some favours for the Nazis on board the Irish ferry because she taunted him for never having any money. Lawrence Huntington directed this film, and it is good for a rainy afternoon.
wilvram Robert Newton plays an MI5 man who infiltrates a gang of Nazi agents involved in the capture of a Swedish scientist whose work on developing the Atom bomb is being smuggled out via neutral Ireland. The eponymous night boat plays an important part in the early part of the story though most of the film takes place in England.Not a film of any great depth, its intricate plot and considerable amount of dialogue is directed with speed and skill by Lawrence Huntington, adroitly steering around several implausibilities in the plot. There are likable performances from Robert Newton, and the admirable Raymond Lovell, who seemed to appear in every other 1940s British film, gives a typically urbane performance as the chief villain; John Ruddock is creepily sinister as his secretary. Newton is assisted by the jaunty Guy Middleton, and the pair get away with several double entendres.With superb black and white photography by Otto Heller, it's a ripping yarn from a bygone age of trilby hats, clipped accents, and British pluck.