
Wednesday, March 12, 2008
| 8:15 p.m. | Journey into Fear Norman Foster (U.S., 1942) |
Archival Print
Welles’s fingerprints are all over this eccentric, enjoyable adaptation of an Eric Ambler World War II spy thriller revolving around smuggling munitions into Turkey. Welles co-wrote the screenplay with Joseph Cotten, produced, and contributed to the visual quality of the film, with its brilliant atmospheric touches and extreme camera angles in cinematography by Karl Struss. The opening shot of an obese Nazi agent in a seedy hotel room playing a scratchy phonograph record sets the mood (he’s not Welles, but we can’t help thinking ahead to Hank Quinlan). Then, there’s a gratuitous magician, like a signature, and Dolores Del Rio (Welles’s paramour) in a cat suit, a nice joke. Welles’s Colonel Haki is a brilliant mumbler, can’t tell which side he’s on; and Cotten’s American naval munitions engineer is all innocence abroad, trailing death in his international wake as the price on his head gets higher on a terror ship to nowhere.
—Judy Bloch
• Written by Joseph Cotten, Welles, based on the novel by Eric Ambler. Photographed by Karl Struss. With Joseph Cotten, Dolores Del Rio, Ruth Warrick, Orson Welles. (71 mins, B&W, 35mm, From Library of Congress, permission Warner Bros.)

