Telluride 2008 Festival
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Sabotage
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Directed by Alfred Hitchcock.
Oskar Homolka plays a London movie-theatre owner who maintains a secret life as a paid terrorist. Homolka's wife Sylvia Sidney doesn't suspect Homolka of any wrongdoing, but she's picked up enough second-hand information about her husband's activities to arouse the interest of government agent (John Loder). Posing as a grocer, Loder moves next door to the Homolkas, befriending Sidney and her precocious young brother Desmond Tester. Sensing that he's being watched, Homolka sends Tester out to deliver a reel of film. The reel contains a time bomb, but Homolka is certain that the boy will deliver his package on time and will be safely away by the time the bomb explodes. Thus begins one of Hitchcock's most electrifying suspense sequences, as the unsuspecting boy is delayed en route to his destination. Sabotage was based on Joseph Conrad's The Secret Agent; the film was retitled A Woman Alone in the US. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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jboozajbooza Re:Hitchcock trivia question:
by jbooza in Movie Games
hasn't rated it.
"[quote user="leeroy711"] Name the Hitchcock film that is based on a book that shares it's name with a different Hitchcock film. [/quote] Sabotage is based on the novel The Secret Agent. " [More]
JakeStevensJakeStevens Decent Early Hitchcock, Albeit ...
by JakeStevens in JakeStevens Blog
liked it.
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"Given the time this film was released (Europe was on the verge of being plunged into WWII), this film expertly uses the fear of the nation to create a large amount of suspense. Is this exploitation? Perhaps. But it seemed to captivate audiences of the time. On a side note, good luck finding a decent copy of this film; I've noticed the only companies to release this film are the public domain-type, Laserlight usually being the best, but even then, the prints are often times horrible at best and the sound is muffled and unintelligible. Oskar Homolka plays a great bad guy - all menacing stares and slightly sinister accent. There's a scene of a bomb going off that is in question, and even Hitchcock has admitted regretting this particular scene, but as this is based on a novel, it remains true to the source material, so I give it props for not kowtowing to studio pressure for a "happier" means to an end, but again, it does seem a bit exploitative to use as a device of ... " [More]
OvationOvation Peter Bogdanovich Interviews Al ...
by Ovation in Alfred Hitchcock
hasn't rated it.
"Peter Bogdanovich Interviews Alfred Hitchcock The legendary interview from 1963 PB: You never watch your films with an audience. Don't you miss hearing them scream? AH: No. I can hear them when I'm making the picture. Do you feel that the American film remains the most vital cinema? Worldwide, yes. Because when we make films for the United States, we are automatically making them for all the world--because America is full of foreigners. It's a melting pot. Which brings us to another point. I don't know what they mean when they talk about "Hollywood" pictures. I say, "Where are they conceived?" Look at this room--you can't see out the windows. We might just as well be in a hotel room in London, or anywhere you like. So here is where we get it down on paper. Now where do we go? We go on location, perhaps; and then where do we work? We're ... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
Alfred Hitchcock relished in playing off of his audience's suspicions, and this early suspense film accomplishes just that. Made when Europe was on the verge of war, Sabotage focuses on Mr. Verloc, the incarnation of the heavily accented neighbor who may not be as benign as he seems. This xenophobic approach works to the film's advantage, as the sight of Verloc and his shadowy associates plotting the destruction of London surely must have grabbed English audiences in 1936. Hitchcock's fascination with espionage and crime is evident, as always, especially in the scene where Verloc meets his contact in the aquarium. Another favorite Hitchcock element present is having a wife slowly come to distrust and fear her husband. Sylvia Sidney plays this transformation beautifully. In the early scenes she is warm and friendly, but as the film progresses, she begins to tighten up, and in the final scenes, her hatred toward Verloc is utterly convincing. As for Oscar Homolka, from the start it's obvious he's up to something, but he is convincing as a small cog in a much larger wheel, a pathetic man who is overwhelmed by the pressures imposed upon him. But the centerpiece of the film is the nerve-racking journey of Mrs. Verloc's younger brother Steve, as he travels through London unaware that the reel can he carries contains a bomb. The bomb, of course, is set to a timer, and each delay adds increasing tension as the hour of detonation approaches. The sequence is pure Hitchcock, as there is nothing more suspenseful than to see an innocent in danger. Sabotage may be a couple of notches below The 39 Steps and The Lady Vanishes, but it is still classic Hitchcock. ~ Bob Mastrangelo, All Movie Guide
 

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