The Man Between
The Man Between | |
---|---|
Directed by | Carol Reed |
Screenplay by | Harry Kurnitz |
Based on | Eric Linklater (based on an original story by) |
Produced by | Carol Reed[1] |
Starring | James Mason Claire Bloom Hildegard Knef |
Cinematography | Desmond Dickinson |
Edited by | Bert Bates |
Music by | John Addison |
Color process | Black and white |
Production companies | London Films Productions British Lion Films |
Distributed by | British Lion Films (UK) United Artists (US) |
Release date |
|
Running time | 102 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Box office | £139,491 (UK)[2] |
The Man Between (also known as Berlin Story) is a 1953 British thriller film directed by Carol Reed and starring James Mason, Claire Bloom and Hildegard Knef. The screenplay concerns a British woman on a visit to post-war Berlin, who is caught up in an espionage ring smuggling secrets into and out of the Eastern Bloc.[3]
Plot
Susanne Mallison (Claire Bloom) flies into Tempelhof Airport in post-war West Berlin, still open to East Berlin residents before the Berlin Wall is erected. She looks around the war-ravaged city with her sister-in-law Bettina, including the ruins of the Reichstag. After a night in a nightclub they plan to visit the eastern sector the next day. Entry is simple: they show their papers; a barrier lifts to give them entry. The atmosphere is different, with huge posters of Stalin and Walter Ulbricht decorating the buildings. There they bump into Ivo Kern (James Mason) in a cafe.
They return to the west sector. Susanne visits Martin, her brother (Bettina's husband), who is in UK army overseeing supplies to Berlin. Susanne starts dating Ivo. He confesses he'd been in love with Bettina. He arrives to collect her in a VW Beetle and they go skating. The sinister Halendar, Ivo's associate, appears almost each time they meet. Ivo tells Halender he wants to go to the west. Halender wants to capture Kastner, a West Berliner, who is wanted by East Berlin Police because he helps East Berliners escape to West Berlin. Hallender agrees to let Ivo go to the West if Ivo helps capture Kastner. Ivo persuades Susanne to ask Martin to invite Kastner to meeting with Ivo at their apartment. Bettina is appalled at the proposed meeting. Bettina confesses to Martin and Susanne that she was married to Ivo until 1943. When Ivo had disappeared, she had assumed he was dead. She says Ivo is a kidnapper for East Berlin authorities.
Martin and a friend plot to kidnap Ivo but he guesses this and sends a boy to leave a sign in the snow that he is not coming. Susanne goes out in the snow and is bundled into a car. Ivo argues with Hallendar saying he has kidnapped the wrong woman.
Ivo is a former lawyer who has participated in Nazi atrocities and is now selling his expertise to East Germans to kidnap and transport certain West Germans to the Eastern bloc. Although Ivo desires to relocate to the West, he is hampered by West German suspicions and his criminal past. Nevertheless, he agrees to a final kidnapping venture that fails, forcing his employer to take over and abduct Briton Susanne by mistake. Ivo had earlier feigned a romance with Susanne as a means to seize his kidnapping target.
The abduction of Susanne presents Ivo with an opportunity to both return the unfortunate victim to the West and impress Western authorities with his atonement. Despite Ivo's selfish and dark facade, Susanne falls in love with him. She tells him that she can see humanity deep inside a man who had once wished to defend the innocent and the 'rights of man'. This glimpse also appears to a young East Berlin boy who assists Ivo and Susanne in their attempt to escape, as he follows Ivo everywhere and the boy is treated with kindness. Ivo almost admits his affection for Susanne on one occasion but he directs the conversation back to his sordid past and the escape attempt.
Ivo and Susanne narrowly avoid capture and wander through the ruins of East Berlin. They try to board a train at Friedrichstrasse but there are too many ID checks. They sabotage a generator to kill the lights to cross a large building site. The message boy (Horst) appears on the east side (it is not explained how he crosses the border). Ivo persuades a woman to give them her flat for the night. They kiss for the first time and it is implied they sleep together. The boy comes to the flat with a laundry lorry driven by Kastner. They hide in the back as it drives to the crossing point. They hold each other.
Ultimately, as Ivo and Susanne are only a few feet from the Brandenburg Gate, hidden in the back of a truck, the truck breaks down. Kastner gets it restarted but not before drawing attention to the lorry, as during his attempts to restart the truck, the capped boy circles on his bike in no-mans-land and has been noticed by one of the border guards; it is he who has unwittingly betrayed them by his presence. Ivo jumps out of the back and is chased by the border guards as he runs from the vehicle. As the truck crosses the neutral zone Ivo tries to reach the back and she reaches back for his hand, but he is gunned down by the guards, having sacrificed his life to help Susanne escape.
Cast
- James Mason as Ivo Kern
- Claire Bloom as Susanne Mallison
- Hildegard Knef as Bettina
- Geoffrey Toone as Martin
- Aribert Wäscher as Halendar
- Ernst Schröder as Kastner
- Dieter Krause as Horst
- Hilde Sessak as Lizzi
- Karl John as Inspector Kleiber
- Ljuba Welitsch as Salome
Production
The movie was filmed on location in Berlin, at the Shepperton Studios in England and at Richmond Ice Rink.
Reception
James Mason won the best actor award from the National Board of Review.
Bosley Crowther of The New York Times wrote: "It must be said, without reflection, that the credit for whatever there is in the way of exciting melodrama in this primarily atmospheric film goes to Mr. Reed for his direction of the actors and camera. For it is the attitudes of his people, the moods of the city in various scenes and the cleverness of the assembly, rather than the sharpness of the story told, that account for the modest distinction on the quality level of The Man Between."[4]
References
- ^ "Alexander Korda Screen Credits". -B.F.I. Accessed 2016-01-10
- ^ Vincent Porter, 'The Robert Clark Account', Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television, Vol 20 No 4, 2000 p499
- ^ "The Man Between (1953)". Archived from the original on 28 November 2007.
- ^ "TWO NEWCOMES ARE SHOWN; James Mason and Claire Bloom Face Danger in Berlin in 'The Man Between' Appointment in Honduras' Is Tale of Jungle Chase Starring Glenn Ford, Ann Sheridan". www.nytimes.com.
External links
- The Man Between at IMDb
- The Man Between at the BFI's Screenonline
- 1953 films
- 1950s spy thriller films
- British black-and-white films
- British spy thriller films
- Cold War spy films
- Films directed by Carol Reed
- Films scored by John Addison
- Films set in Berlin
- Films shot in Berlin
- Films with screenplays by Harry Kurnitz
- Films set in East Germany
- Films set in West Germany
- 1950s English-language films
- 1950s British films
- English-language spy thriller films
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