Directed by:
Karel LamačScreenplay:
Anatole de GrunwaldCinematography:
Otto HellerComposer:
Benjamin FrankelCast:
James Mason, Tom Walls, Phyllis Stanley, David Farrar, Karel Štěpánek, Betty Warren, George Robey, Finlay Currie, Anthony Dawson, Eric Mason, Walter Crisham (more)Plots(1)
A brave army captain investigating the schemes of enemy spies has to deal with the parallel investigation of a peculiar but courageous young woman. With the help from future Hollywood star James Mason in the leading role Karel Lamač uses his previous experience with genre film. (Summer Film School)
Reviews (1)
Lamač and his English years are something that still seems to be nonexistent, but when a projection comes around once in a while, it's followed by a collision with the ignorance of the work he had already made at the time. So how about embracing They Met in the Dark as another feel-good movie that works exactly as dozens of movies have worked before? Why make things difficult for ourselves by looking for noir at a time when it didn't exist yet, and making arguments about cosmopolitanism, which was already known before 1925, etc.? Lamač, on the other hand, is only completely non-violently reuniting what he has been doing all these decades. He simply coaxed a chatty blonde into the lead role, let her take a train ride under the pretext of a detective plot, walk through the environment of a dance café and enjoy the sight of an illusionist’s performance. Still not familiar to you? For twenty years, Lamač's headstrong blonde was Anny Ondra (and if she wasn't available, she had a whole cohort of substitutes to take her place). Lamač himself spent half his life on the train, having worked all over Europe (Czechoslovakia, Austria, Germany, France, Holland, Belgium... after the war, the USA and West Germany) and he aspired to become a prestidigitator before he fully embraced film. It’s nothing new under the sun. Just another piece of the popular Lamač puzzle. ()
Gallery (6)
Photo © Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer