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Night Train to Munich

Night Train to Munich

  • Status: Released
  • 31-08-1940
  • Runtime: 96 min
  • Score: 7.3
  • Vote count: 84

Czechoslovakia, March 1939, on the eve of World War II. As the German invaders occupy Prague, inventor Axel Bomasch manages to flee and reach England; but those who need to put his knowledge at the service of the Nazi war machine, in order to carry out their evil plans of destruction, will stop at nothing to capture him.

Margaret Lockwood

Anna Bomasch

Rex Harrison

Gus Bennett

Paul Henreid

Karl Marsen

Basil Radford

Charters

Naunton Wayne

Caldicott

James Harcourt

Axel Bomasch

Felix Aylmer

Dr. Fredericks

Wyndham Goldie

Dryton

Roland Culver

Roberts

Eliot Makeham

Schwab

Raymond Huntley

Kampenfeldt

Austin Trevor

Capt. Prada

Kenneth Kent

Controller

C. V. France

Admiral Hassinger

Frederick Valk

Gestapo Officer

Morland Graham

Teleferic Attendant

Adolf Hitler

Self (archive footage)

David Horne

Czech Official (uncredited)

Wilfred Walter

Czech Official (uncredited)

Winifred Oughton

Martha (uncredited)

John Wengraf

KL Physician (uncredited)

Charles Oliver

KL Officer (uncredited)

Allan Jeayes

KL Prisoner (uncredited)

Albert Lieven

Paul - KL Guard (uncredited)

Wally Patch

Fisherman (uncredited)

Arthur Denton

Deckchair Attendant (uncredited)

Ian Fleming

British Official (uncredited)

Howard Marion-Crawford

Checkpoint Officer (uncredited)

Bryan Herbert

Train Inspector (uncredited)

Irene Handl

Stationmaster (uncredited)

Ben Williams

Train Steward (uncredited)

Edward Baxter

Hugh Griffith

Howard Lang

Fletcher Lightfoot

Jack May

G.H. Mulcaster

J.H. Roberts

Billy Russell

Torin Thatcher

Pat Williams

John Chard

A fabulous spy film boasting top draw scripting and supreme direction. Carol Reed is a truly wonderful director, his CV boasts the likes of The Third Man, Oliver and Odd Man Out, all great films for sure, which only makes it more infuriating that a gem like Night Train To Munich is incredibly hard to get hold of. I have only managed to catch it myself because of the unearthing of VHS tapes long thought to have been lost years ago, and it's just like finding hidden treasure I can tell you! Based on a story by Gordon Wellesley, and scripted by the adroitly talented teaming of Sydney Gilliat and Frank Launder, Night Train To Munich is a lesson in how to not over blow your subject, all the sequences flow without boring the viewer, with Reed astutely approaching the material with subtlety instead of blunderbuss bluster. Another highlight of the movie to me is that it could have so easily been a propaganda bore, the Germans being the devil incarnate, but here it feels that an equality of characterisations was the order of the day - something that many other genre pieces lost sight of further down the line. Rex Harrison, Margaret Lockwood and Paul Henreid are all excellent here, whilst wonderful comedic relief comes courtesy of Naunton Wayne and Basil Radford's English cricketers (fans of The Lady Vanishes will identify right away). Although this picture is script driven above all else, the action sequences are a joy to behold, with the final third of the picture an unadulterated pleasure, spies and stooges, plants and treachery, oh it's all here folks, enjoy, if you can get a good print of it that is! 9/10

CinemaSerf

There are shades of the "Lady Vanishes" in Carol Reed's intriguing tale of a complex mission to re-rescue a top Czech scientist from the Nazis. Having already been safely in Britain, he was kidnapped from under the very noses of British intelligence and so now they have to devise a plan to get him back. Rex Harrison - who has at least three identities in this thriller is charged with leading the attempt; aided by the scientist's daughter - Margaret Lockwood, and pursued by the duplicitous Paul Henreid as "Marsen". The adventure element is nothing particularly different, indeed I constantly expected Harrison to break into his King Mongkut impression - he made for a very unconvincing Nazi. The real stars, for me, were Messrs. Radford and Wayne as "Charters & Caldicott". Given much more on-screen time than usual they exemplified, I thought by humour and crass ineptitude, much of the mindset of the British establishment in the run up to the Nazi invasions of the late 1930s that probably only Churchill had the foresight to anticipate. To be honest, there's very little suspense in this film - but it is a good team effort with some delightful Haydn accompaniment.