Film Review
During his very productive period in Hollywood in the 1940s and 1950s, Fritz Lang rarely
came as close to his earlier cinematic achievements (
Dr Mabuse, der Spieler (1922),
M (1931)) as he did with this stylish suspense
thriller, an obvious anti-Nazi propaganda film which bears more than a passing resemblance
to Hitchcock's
The 39 Steps (1935).
The compelling narrative, based on a popular albeit convoluted Graham Greene novel, is
complemented by a stunning visual design which is classic film noir at its most alluring
and atmospheric.
Lang's distinctive expressionist touches (long shadows, deep-focus
photography and skewed camera angles) are effectively called into play to
emphasise the chilling sense of neurosis and fear
that underpins the plot, conveying a very real sense of what it's like to find yourself
in a Kafka-like world where nothing appears to make sense and where everyone is a potential
enemy. Whilst the plot is over-complicated and at times confusing, Lang's sublime artistry
and some gripping performances keep his audience thoroughly hooked from start to finish.
Ministry of Fear an unsettlingly dark film where nothing can be taken at face value,
where death lurks in every shadow, and where the outcome is far from certain.
You would hardly think it was made in the darkest days of World War II...
© James Travers 2007
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Next Fritz Lang film:
The Woman in the Window (1944)
Film Synopsis
England, 1940. Leaving an asylum where he has spent the last two years, Stephen Neale
decides to return to London, even though the capital is under attack from German
bombers. On the way, he stops at a garden fete where he wins a cake by correctly
guessing its weight. In the train to London, Neale strikes up a conversation with
a blind man, who suddenly assaults him and runs off with the cake. Neale gives chase,
but the blind man falls victim to a German shell. Convinced that he has become caught
up in an elaborate plot, Neale hires a private detective and conducts his own investigation.
This leads him to the organisers of the charity which arranged the fete where he acquired
the mysterious cake - Austrian refugees Willi and Carla Hilfe. At a séance
attended by members of the charity, a man is killed and Neale is the obvious culprit.
Carla makes discoveries of her own and it soon becomes clear that there is more at stake
than Neale's life. The security of Great Britain is under threat, and from a very
dangerous enemy…
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.