Assignment – Paris!

Assignment – Paris! is a 1952 American Cold War film noir directed by Robert Parrish and starring Dana Andrews, Märta Torén, George Sanders and Audrey Totter.

Assignment – Paris!
Italian poster
Directed byRobert Parrish
Produced bySamuel Marx
Jerry Bresler
Screenplay byWilliam Bowers
Walter Goetz (adaptation)
Jack Palmer White (adaptation)
Based onTrial of Terror
1952 book
by Paul Gallico and Pauline Gallico
StarringDana Andrews
Märta Torén
George Sanders
Audrey Totter
Music byGeorge Duning
CinematographyRay Cory
Burnett Guffey
Edited byCharles Nelson
Donald W. Starling
Production
company
Columbia Pictures
Distributed byColumbia Pictures
Release date
  • September 4, 1952 (1952-09-04)
Running time
84 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Premise

Paris-based New York Herald Tribune reporter Jimmy Race (Andrews) is sent by his boss (Sanders) behind the Iron Curtain in Budapest to investigate a meeting involving the Hungarian ambassador. While on assignment, Race is framed for espionage.[1][2]

Cast

Production

Phil Karlson was the original director, but was fired during filming.[3]

It was filmed on location in Paris and Budapest.

gollark: "we can't immediately totally fix it and it's not a problem which has affected me yet so let's ignore it"
gollark: That is a... food product or something... which exists, alright.
gollark: Besides, if you could somehow control matter with love, people would have isolated the property and made automatic love generators.
gollark: It's not like Christ and Moses and whoever definitely *did* do those things just because it's said they did. You don't have to make a convoluted bizarre theory to explain it.
gollark: Sorry, network issues, back now.

References

  1. Mavis, Paul (2011). The Espionage Filmography: United States Releases, 1898 through 1999 (ebook ed.). McFarland. ISBN 978-1-4766-0427-5.
  2. McKay, James (2010). Dana Andrews: The Face of Noir. McFarland. p. 120. ISBN 978-0-7864-4614-8.
  3. Dixon, Wheeler Winston (June 2017). "Phil Karlson: The Forgotten Master of Film Noir". Senses of Cinema.


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