Poster
Watch

Foreign Intrigue

Foreign Intrigue

  • Status: Released
  • 28-06-1956
  • Runtime: 95 min
  • Score: 5.7
  • Vote count: 24

Millionaire Victor Danemore, living on the French Riviera, dies suddenly of a heart attack. His secretary, Dave Bishop, wants to know more about his employer's life. Surprisingly, not even his young wife knows anything about her husband's background or how he earned his fortune. Clues lead Bishop to Vienna and Stockholm, where he learns that Danemore was blackmailing people who cooperated with the Nazis during World War II.

Robert Mitchum

Dave Bishop

Geneviève Page

Dominique Danemore

Ingrid Thulin

Brita Lindquist

Frédéric O'Brady

Jonathan Spring

Inga Tidblad

Mrs Lundquist

Lauritz Falk

Jones

Eugene Deckers

Pierre Sandoz

John Padovano

Tony Forrest

Frederick Schrecker

Karl Mannheim

Georges Hubert

Dr. Thibault

Peter Copley

Brown

Lily Kann

Blind Housekeeper

Ralph Brown

Smith

Milo Sperber

Baum

Jim Gérald

Bistro Owner

Jean Galland

Victor Danemore

John Starck

Starky

Gilbert Robin

Dodo

Valentine Camax

Charwoman

Robert Le Béal

Charles

Lars Kåge

(uncredited)

Sylvain Lévignac

Henchman (uncredited)

Jimmy Perrys

Worker Living in the Building of Mannheim (uncredited)

Ulla Sjöblom

Unknown (voice) (uncredited)

Pierre Vaudier

Customs Officer at Vienna Airport (uncredited)

CinemaSerf

A wealthy man is half way up his library ladder when he is taken ill and dies. Nobody quite knows where the now deceased "Danemore" made his fortune so his assistant "Bishop" (Robert Mitchum) decides to find out more about his enigmatic employer. He's somewhat taken aback by just how little the widow (Genevieve Page) knows about things, but there is perhaps one clue in Vienna. Once he gets there, though, he is quickly embroiled in some post-war machinations that takes him to Sweden where a recent suicide amidst a wealthy family, taking a shine to the daughter of the house "Brita" (Ingrid Thulin) and the behaviour of his newly acquired gadfly "Spring" (Frederic O'Brady) only muddles things up even more. Mitchum is quite effective here delivering his best less-is-more style of characterisation, but I found neither Page nor Thulin really made much impact on a story where the roles of the women were actually a lot more important than in many of these post-war noirs. It's a but too wordy and the pace could also be doing with a bit of it's own electric shock treatment as it struggles to build or sustain much momentum. There is some nice photography to accompany the travelogue elements of the story and the mystery just about delivers, but it's nothing much to write home about.