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Foreign
Correspondent (1940)
In Alfred Hitchcock's political thriller set just before
the outbreak of war on the Continent:
- the assassination scene in Amsterdam when Dutch
statesman Van Meer (Albert Bassermann) (actually a doppelganger)
was shot in the face as he mounted the steep stairs in the rain
by a photographer with a gun (hired by a secret spy organization);
and the image of a sea of bobbing black umbrellas revealing the
escape route of the assassin
- the windmill set (including the sounds of the wind
in the sails and the wooden gears), actually a hideout for Nazi spies,
where the getaway car after the assassination suddenly disappeared;
and the mystery of the mill blades turning the wrong direction, signaling
a Nazi airplane to land, to pick up the kidnapped Dutch statesman;
the film's MacGuffin was the secret Clause 27 in a peace treaty,
memorized by Dutch diplomat Van Meer who was one of the signatories
of the treaty; the film revolved around trying to locate and save
the diplomat (and prevent his torture) - because he was the key to
maintaining peace in Europe in 1939
- NY crime reporter Johnny Jones/Huntley Haverstock
(Joel McCrea) had been sent to Europe to report on the crisis, and
unwittingly found himself embroiled in the troubling situation when
he uncovered a nefarious spy organization run by Stephen Fisher (Herbert
Marshall), the father of his love interest Carol (Laraine Day)
- the tense scene atop Westminster Cathedral's bell
tower as contract killer Rowley (Edmund Gwenn) cajoled reporter Johnny
Jones/Huntley Haverstock and readied to push him off, but ended up
tumbling to his own death
- the spectacularly convincing trans-atlantic plane
crash disaster from the cockpit's point of view (over the shoulder
of the pilots); and the subsequent sequence of the few survivors
clinging to the plane's fuselage and crowded wing, and villain Stephen
Fisher's heroic sacrifice and drowning in order to save the others
in the turbulent waters
Realistic Trans-Atlantic Plane Crash
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- the final, provocative radio appeal (a tacked-on
propagandistic ending) from London by reporter Jones, who was begging
the American public to end its neutral stance and enter the war,
as bombs fell on the darkened radio studio: ("It's death coming
to London...It's too late to do anything here now except stand
in the dark and let them come. It's as if the lights were all out
everywhere, except in America. Keep those lights burning there!
Cover them with steel! Ring them with guns! Build a canopy of battleships
and bombing planes around them! Hello, America! Hang on to your
lights. They're the only lights left in the world")
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Johnny Jones (Joel McCrea) with Stephen Fisher (Herbert
Marshall)
Assassination in the Rain
Windmill Set
Rowley About to Push Jones Off Cathedral Bell Tower
Concluding Radio Appeal
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