Odd man out:

"Taking place largely over the course of one tense night, Carol Reed's psychological noir, set in an unnamed Belfast, stars James Mason as a revolutionary ex-con leading a robbery that goes horribly wrong. Injured and hunted by the police, he seeks refuge throughout the city, while the wom...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
1. Verfasser: Alwyn, William 1905-1985 (KomponistIn)
Weitere Verfasser: Reed, Carol 1906-1976 (RegisseurIn), Green, Frederick L. 1902-1953 (DrehbuchautorIn), Sherriff, Robert C. 1896-1975 (DrehbuchautorIn), Krasker, Robert 1913-1981 (Kameramann/frau), Mason, James 1909-1984 (SchauspielerIn), Newton, Robert 1905-1956 (SchauspielerIn), Ryan, Kathleen 1922-1985 (SchauspielerIn), Cusack, Cyril 1910-1993 (SchauspielerIn)
Format: Video Software
Sprache:English
Veröffentlicht: New York, NY <<The>> Criterion Collection 2015
Schriftenreihe:The Criterion collection 754
Zusammenfassung:"Taking place largely over the course of one tense night, Carol Reed's psychological noir, set in an unnamed Belfast, stars James Mason as a revolutionary ex-con leading a robbery that goes horribly wrong. Injured and hunted by the police, he seeks refuge throughout the city, while the woman he loves searches for him among the shadows. Reed and cinematographer Robert Krasker (who would collaborate again on "The Third Man") create images of stunning depth for this fierce, spiritual depiction of a man's ultimate confrontation with himself." [criterion.com]
Beschreibung:Aspect ratio 1.37:1. - New high-definition digital restoration
Orig.: Großbritannien 1947
Enth. new interview with british cinema scholar John Hill, author of "Cinema and Northern Ireland: film, culture and politics" , "Postwar poetry", a new short documentary about the film ; new interview with music scholar Jeff Smith about composer William Alwyn and his score ; "Home, James", a 1972 documentary featuring actor James Mason revisiting his hometown ; radio adaptation of the film from 1952, starring Mason and Dan O'Herlihy ; an essay by critic Imogen Sara Smith
Beschreibung:2 DVDs, NTSC, Ländercode 1, 116 Min., s/w, mono, Dolby digital 12 cm Beil.
ISBN:9781604659771

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