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Ministry of Fear (1944) -- Stephen Neale is released into WWII England after two years in an asylum, but it doesn't seem so sane outside either. On his way back to London to rejoin civilization, he stumbles across a murderous spy ring and doesn't quite know who to turn to.
Ministry of Fear (1944) -- Stephen Neale is released into WWII England after two years in an asylum, but it doesn't seem so sane outside either. On his way back to London to rejoin civilization, he stumbles across a murderous spy ring and doesn't quite know who to turn to.

Overview

User Rating:
7.3/10   1,257 votes
MOVIEmeter: ?
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Director:
Writers:
Seton I. Miller (screenplay)
Graham Greene (novel)
Contact:
View company contact information for Ministry of Fear on IMDbPro.
Release Date:
16 October 1944 (USA) more
Plot:
Stephen Neale is released into WWII England after two years in an asylum, but it doesn't seem so sane outside either... more | add synopsis
Plot Keywords:
User Reviews:
Above Average B Spy Drama more (28 total)

Cast

  (in credits order) (verified as complete)

Ray Milland ... Stephen Neale
Marjorie Reynolds ... Carla Hilfe
Carl Esmond ... Willi Hilfe
Hillary Brooke ... Mrs. Bellane #2, spiritualist
Percy Waram ... Inspector Prentice
Dan Duryea ... Cost / Travers the Tailor
Alan Napier ... Dr. Forrester
Erskine Sanford ... George Rennit, private investigator
rest of cast listed alphabetically:
Harry Allen ... Tailor's Delivery Man (uncredited)
Frank Baker ... Scotland Yard Man (uncredited)
Vangie Beilby ... Old Lady at Charity Bazaar (uncredited)
Wilson Benge ... Air Raid Warden (uncredited)
Evelyn Beresford ... Fat Lady at Charity Bazaar (uncredited)
Arthur Blake ... Man (uncredited)
Matthew Boulton ... Official, Ministry of Home Security (uncredited)
George Broughton ... Man in Tailor's Shop (uncredited)
Leonard Carey ... Porter (uncredited)
Bruce Carruthers ... Police Clerk (uncredited)
David Clyde ... English Bobby (uncredited)
Anne Curson ... Lady with Children (uncredited)
Frank Dawson ... Vicar (uncredited)
Cyril Delevanti ... Railroad Agent (uncredited)
Aminta Dyne ... Mrs. Bellane #1, fortune teller (uncredited)
Edward Fielding ... Ministry Executive (uncredited)
Mary Field ... Martha Penteel, artist (uncredited)
Byron Foulger ... Newby, rushing to leave seance (uncredited)
Helena Grant ... Mrs. Merrick - Hilfe's Secretary (uncredited)
Grayce Hampton ... Lady with Floppy Hat (uncredited)
Olaf Hytten ... Tailor's Shop Clerk (uncredited)
Boyd Irwin ... Scotland Yard Man Finding Cake Box (uncredited)
Colin Kenny ... Scotland Yard Man (uncredited)
Frank Leigh ... Man (uncredited)
Connie Leon ... Lady Purchaser of Cake (uncredited)
Thomas Louden ... Mr. Newland, antiquarian bookseller (uncredited)
Lester Matthews ... Dr. Norton at asylum (uncredited)
Clive Morgan ... Man in Tailor's Shop (uncredited)
Ottola Nesmith ... Woman at Admission Gate (uncredited)
Jessica Newcombe ... Cake Booth Lady (uncredited)
Hilda Plowright ... Maid for Mrs. Bellane #2 (uncredited)
Edmond Russell ... Unspecified Role (uncredited)
Francis Sayles ... Man Answering Rennit's Knock (uncredited)
Eric Wilton ... Scotland Yard Man (uncredited)
Eustace Wyatt ... Blind Man (uncredited)
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Directed by
Fritz Lang 
 
Writing credits
Seton I. Miller (screenplay)

Graham Greene (novel)

Produced by
Seton I. Miller .... associate producer
Buddy G. DeSylva .... executive producer (uncredited)
 
Original Music by
Victor Young 
Miklós Rózsa (uncredited)
 
Cinematography by
Henry Sharp (director of photography)
 
Film Editing by
Archie Marshek 
 
Art Direction by
Hans Dreier 
Hal Pereira 
 
Set Decoration by
Bertram C. Granger  (as Bertram Granger)
 
Makeup Department
Wally Westmore .... makeup artist
Leonora Sabine .... hair stylist supervisor (uncredited)
 
Production Management
Don Robb .... unit manager (uncredited)
 
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
George Templeton .... assistant director (uncredited)
 
Sound Department
Don Johnson .... sound recordist
W.C. Smith .... sound recordist
 
Costume and Wardrobe Department
Edith Head .... costumes
 
Music Department
Eugene Zador .... orchestrator (uncredited)
 
Other crew
Lester Sharpe .... coach: Austrian accent (uncredited)
 
Crew believed to be complete


Production CompaniesDistributors
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Additional Details

Also Known As:
Graham Greene's Ministry of Fear (Australia)
more
Runtime:
86 min (copyright length)
Country:
Language:
Aspect Ratio:
1.37 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
Mono (Western Electric Mirrophonic Recording)
Certification:
USA:Passed (National Board of Review) | USA:TV-PG (TV rating) | UK:A (original rating) | UK:PG | New Zealand:PG | Australia:PG | Finland:K-16 | USA:Approved (PCA #9511) | Sweden:15

Fun Stuff

Trivia:
One of over 700 Paramount Productions, filmed between 1929 and 1949, which were sold to MCA/Universal in 1958 for television distribution, and have been owned and controlled by Universal ever since. more
Quotes:
Stephen Neale: Mr. Travers is quite put out. more
Movie Connections:
Version of "Quinta colonna" (1966) more

FAQ

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22 out of 31 people found the following review useful.
Above Average B Spy Drama, 16 March 2004
Author: Robert J. Maxwell (rmax304823@yahoo.com) from Deming, New Mexico

Fritz Lang was responsible for a couple of true German originals, including the fantasy "Metropolis" and the early talkie, "M". He was pretty popular. He claims at one point he was invited to Goebel's office and asked to lead the film department at the Ministry of Propaganda. "What could I say? I said, 'I'm tickled pink, Sir.'" He and his family were on the next available transit out of Germany.

He was a prime catch for Hollywood, where he as known for strutting around in riding breeches and boots, a monacle in his eye, shouting instructions through a megaphone. I've never found his American movies actually gripping, although always interesting in some way or other. They are unmistakably Langian if you know what to look for. His thematic use of objects like clocks. Or, here, a nicely done rainy shot of a tailor's shop in London. A scene in which a heavy in a dark room shouts to a gun wielding woman, "You shouldn't shoot your own brother." The heavy then flings open the door to the bright hallway, dashes out and slams the door behind him. A shot immediately rings out and the otherwise dark screen now shows a tiny punctuation point of light from the hallway illuminating the bullet hole in the door. And another scene near the beginning in which Ray Milland invites the other passenger in his train compartment to have a piece of cake. The queer-looking stranger thanks him, takes the cake box, reaches in and slowly begins crumbling the cake in his hand, sifting through it, while Milland stares in amazement.

But it's a pretty unimaginative plot, rather routine, and neither Lang nor the performers bring much extra to it. The narrative is -- I want to say this without seeming to ridicule it. It's "heavy handed?" Maybe that's it. I'm doing the best I can to avoid "Teutonic." A couple of changes in the dialogue and you wouldn't have too much trouble getting rid of Milland and putting Rathbone and Bruce in his place. "Sherlock Holmes and the Cake of Death." Or, with a little more effort, it could become the peg for a Bob Hope comedy. "My Favorite Recipe."

I did like Dan Duryea though, the phony scuzzbag. He fakes being shot once, then gets it the second time while fondling a pair of gigantic scissors. Dan Duryea dies double deaths. Those scissors must have been Lang's idea because he used them more than once as weapons. He seemed to like them. He seems to have liked Duryea too because he used him twice more.

It's not his best American film but it's above average for the genre. And it's worth seeing if only because Lang himself directed it. It's good enough that you're not likely to be bored by it.

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