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The Stranger

 
Points:
100
 
format: DVD
series: The Stranger  [view more]
published: January 01, 2004
genre: Drama
# of discs: 1
 
Story:
Acting:
Directing:
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Product details

Crew

Director: Orson Welles
Cast: Orson Welles
Edward G. Robinson
Loretta Young
Philip Merivale
Richard Long
Byron Keith
Billy House
Writer: Anthony Veiller
Producer: Sam Spiegel
Composer: Bronislau Kaper


MPAA rating

 


Product details

Screen format:Full Frame - 1.33
Audio track:(unspecified) - English
DVD region code:Region 0


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Editorial review

Source: Amazon

The legendary story that hovers over Orson Welles's The Stranger is that he wanted Agnes Moorehead to star as the dogged Nazi hunter who trails a war criminal to a sleepy New England town. The part went to E.G. Robinson, who is marvelous, but it points out how many compromises Welles made on the film in an attempt to show Hollywood he could make a film on time, on budget, and on their own terms. He accomplished all three, turning out a stylish if unambitious film noir thriller, his only Hollywood film to turn a profit on its original release. Welles stars as unreformed fascist Franz Kindler, hiding as a schoolteacher in a New England prep school for boys and newly married to the headmaster's lovely if naive daughter (Loretta Young). Welles the director is in fine form for the opening sequences, casting a moody tension as agents shadow a twitchy low-level Nazi official skulking through South American ports and building up to dramatic crescendo as Kindler murders this little man, the lovely woods becoming a maelstrom of swirling leaves that expose the body he furiously tries to bury. The rest of film is a well-designed but conventional cat-and-mouse game featuring an eye-rolling performance by Welles and a thrilling conclusion played out in the dark clock tower that looms over the little village. --Sean Axmaker
 
 

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