Diplomatic Courier

Diplomatic Courier is a 1952 crime film noir directed by Henry Hathaway and starring Tyrone Power, Patricia Neal and Stephen McNally.

Diplomatic Courier
Film poster
Directed byHenry Hathaway
Produced byCasey Robinson
Screenplay byCasey Robinson
Liam O'Brien
Based onSinister Errand
by Peter Cheyney
StarringTyrone Power
Patricia Neal
Stephen McNally
Music bySol Kaplan
CinematographyLucien Ballard
Edited byJames B. Clark
Production
company
20th Century Fox
Distributed by20th Century Fox
Release date
June 13, 1952
Running time
98 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$1.4 million (US rentals)[1]

Plot

Mike Kells is assigned by the State Department to fly to Salzburg and meet his old friend Sam Carew, who will pass a top-secret document to him on a particular train platform. A passenger on the Salzburg-bound plane, Joan Ross, takes a liking to Mike and expresses a desire to see him again.

However, at the set meeting site, Sam ignores him because he is apparently being tailed by two men. Mike boards the same train and sits near a woman Sam seems to know. In a tunnel, Mike is shocked to see the two men throw Carew's body off the train.

Col. Cagle and Sgt. Guelvada of the US Army tersely interrogate Mike as to what went wrong. They believe the woman's involved and order him to travel to Trieste to find her. Guelvada goes along.

She is identified as Janine Betki, a singer and a possible Russian agent. Mike goes to a club where she once performed. He runs into Joan there instead. After a strange man slips Mike some information, the man tries to flee for safety but is murdered in a hit-and-run incident by a car which had almost killed Mike a moment before.

Janine is located and explains to Mike that she not only worked with Carew but also loved him and spied on the Russians on his behalf. Still, the colonel insists Janine was a loyal Soviet agent by showing Mike the dossier on her efforts as a Russian spy, a dossier which was compiled by Carew himself. Joan then contacts Mike and claims a sniper tried to kill her. After he leaves, it is Joan who is revealed to be the Russian agent.

Mike deduces that Carew hid microfilm in a wristwatch. He retrieves the watch from the pawn shop where she left it, only to have Joan try to take it from him at gunpoint before she is surprised and overpowered by the faithful American Sergeant. Meanwhile, a complication arises that no one anticipated because the pawnbroker had cleaned the watch and removed the film. After Mike is captured by the Soviets, Janine successfully bargains for both of their lives by agreeing to give the microfilm to them. In the end, the microfilm is recovered by the American authorities while Mike manages to meet with Janine in the presence of her Soviet spymaster in a compartment on a moving train, where he ultimately facilitates their escape to freedom.

Cast

Production

Patricia Neal said she enjoyed her role. "She was a cosmopolite, a free liver, and an exciting person."[2]

gollark: Lots of things in life weren't ever actually designed. Ascribing purpose to them seems silly.
gollark: Memetically spread Alzheimer's? Troubling. Enacting ΞΆ-124 quarantine procedures.
gollark: Do you *need* punctuation, really?
gollark: i.e. are you trying to change... political... attitudes by doing a thing.
gollark: I mostly define behaviour as political or not by intent.

References

  1. 'Top Box-Office Hits of 1952', Variety, January 7, 1953
  2. HOWARD THOMPSON (Nov 2, 1952). "PORTRAIT OF THE LADY NAMED NEAL". New York Times. p. X5.
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