
Cloak and Dagger
(Clandestino y Caballero)
(Usa, 1946) [B/N, 106 m.]
IMDb
Ficha técnica.
Dirección: Fritz Lang
Argumento: Boris Ingster, John Larkin (historia original, basada en el libro de Alastair MacBain y Corey Ford).
Guión: Ring Lardner Jr., Albert Maltz.
Fotografía: Sol Polito (B&W).
Música: Max Steiner.
Producción: Milton Sperling.
Productora: United States Pictures.
Sinopsis: Cerca del final de la Segunda Guerra Mundial, los aliados deben descubrir cuánto sabe las potencias del Eje sobre bombas atómicas. Por ello, el EI OSS recluta al físico Alvah Jesper para encontrar a su colega anterior, Katerin Lodor, ahora en Suiza, y sacarle del país para ser interrogado. Él le encuentra, pero un agente alemán les descubre y Lodor muere. Jesper debe ahora conseguir en Italia, con la ayuda de Gina, líder de la resistencia, y convencer a Polda, también físico, que se vaya con él. Pero Polda no irá hasta que rescaten a su hija de los alemanes...
AMG Sinopsis: Inspired by actual events, Cloak and Dagger was first major "atomic power" melodrama of the postwar era. Gary Cooper stars as bookish physics professor Alvah Jesper, a character obviously based on A-bomb codeveloper J. Robert Oppenheimer. Pressed into service by the OSS in the last months of WW2, Jasper is sent to Europe in search of Dr. Polda (Vladimir Sokoloff), an atomic scientist held captive by the Nazis. In Switzerland, Jesper quickly runs afoul of enemy spies who murder the only person to know Polda's whereabouts. Moving on to Italy, he links up with the partisans, falling in love with gorgeous resistance fighter Gina (Lilli Palmer). Adopting a disguise, Jesper finally locates Polda and spends the last few reels in a desperate dash to freedom. Screenwriters Albert Maltz and Ring Lardner Jr. had originally intended Cloak and Dagger as a warning to a complacent America. Director Fritz Lang recalled in later years that, as conceived and filmed, the ending was to have occured after Jesper and a group of Allied soldiers stumbled upon the ruins of a secret Nazi A-bomb factory, as well as evidence that the German scientists had fled to parts unknown with their atomic secrets intact. "It's day one of the Atomic Age", Jesper was to have noted ruefully, "And God help us if we think we can keep it a secret much longer." This lengthy coda was removed from the final release print, transforming a thought-provoking drama into a mere romantic thriller.
AMG Review: This superior WWII espionage thriller finds Gary Cooper on a secret mission to find details on the German effort to build an atomic bomb. The story is pretty far-fetched, and there is little real chemistry between Cooper and leading lady Lilli Palmer, but it is all presented in a believable enough fashion. Of the supporting cast, Marc Lawrence has a notable role as a vicious pro-Nazi Italian who has an especially brutal fight scene with Cooper, Helene Thimig appears as a German physicist who has escaped to Switzerland, and Dan Seymour gets a rare break from playing henchmen to actually be one of the good guys. The script touches all the important patriotic buttons that one would expect from a film such as this, but fortunately for the audience, it is more concerned with making a good caper. Much of the script's original political content was reportedly diluted, but there is an effective scene where Cooper forcefully tells spymaster Colonel Walsh that if the government spent as much money and effort on finding a cure for tuberculosis or cancer as it does on making a bomb the world would be better off. Fritz Lang's direction, as always, is filled with atmospherics, a preoccupation with secret dealings and dangerous activities, and wonderful little touches that are more important to the plot than they at first appear to be (such as Cooper covering his face when a photographer tries to take his picture when he arrives in Switzerland, spurring all sorts of suspicions and setting the plot into motion). Cloak and Dagger is worth a look just to see Cooper as an atomic scientist, but beyond that novelty, it is the sort of tale of international intrigue that Lang clearly relished making.
He encontrado la película en la mula en un ripeado de DVD y en versión original en inglés y le he sincronizado el AUDIO EN ESPAÑOL de cuando la pasaron por TV hará unos 16 años. No he sabido encontrar subtítulos.
Los Elinks son:
Película:
Audio en español:
Subtítulos en castellano:
Subtítulos (descarga directa): castellano / portBR.
DATOS DE LOS ARCHIVOS:maskarasnake, en Cine-Clásico escribió:Partiendo del audio español, he montado los subtítulos y los tenéis en descarga directa aquí http://www.opensubtitles.org/es/subtitl ... -dagger-es
y en la mulaClandestino y Caballero (Cloak and Dagger) (Fritz Lang, 1946).srt
Lo que no se es si la sincronización se corresponde con el ripeo de este hilo. El que yo tengo es éste dual:
Clandestino y Caballero (Cloak and Dagger) (Fritz Lang, 1946).avi
A disfrutar en V.o.s. esta infravalorada película. Saludos.
Código: Seleccionar todo
DURACIÓN: 01:46:35.
COMPRESOR: XviD
BITRATE: 831 kb/s
FPS: 23.976 FPS
TAMAÑO: 701 MB
A.R.: 512x384 (1.33:1) [=4:3]
AUDIO: MP3 81 kb/s, mono VBR a 48000 Hz
AUDIO ESPAÑOL: MP3 80 kb/s, mono CBR a 48000 Hz
Clandestino y caballero (Fritz Lang, 1946) DVDRip Dual
Saludos a todos.