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Ministry of Fear (1944) [The Criterion Collection #649] [Re-UP]

Posted By: Someonelse
Ministry of Fear (1944) [The Criterion Collection #649] [Re-UP]

Ministry of Fear (1944)
DVD9 | VIDEO_TS | NTSC 4:3 | 01:27:01 | 6,60 Gb
Audio: English AC3 1.0 @ 384 Kbps | Subtitles: English SDH
Genre: Crime, Film-Noir | The Criterion Collection #649

Director: Fritz Lang
Stars: Ray Milland, Marjorie Reynolds, Carl Esmond

Suffused with dread and paranoia, this Fritz Lang adaptation of a novel by Graham Greene is a plunge into the eerie shadows of a world turned upside down by war. En route to London after being released from a mental institution, Stephen Neale (Ray Milland) stops at a seemingly innocent village fair, after which he finds himself caught in the web of a sinister underworld with possible Nazi connections. Lang was among the most illustrious of the European émigré filmmakers working in Hollywood during World War II, and Ministry of Fear is one of his finest American productions, an unpredictable thriller with style to spare.


Ministry of Fear, the third of four anti-Nazi films that German director Fritz Lang made during his tenure in Hollywood (the other three being Hangmen Also Die, Man Hunt, and Cloak and Dagger), is hardly one of the great director’s signature works, but it still holds up nicely as an example of the paranoid espionage thriller that Lang helped pioneer in the 1920s and that was particularly in vogue in Hollywood during the war years.

Ministry of Fear (1944) [The Criterion Collection #649] [Re-UP]

Lang himself didn’t think much of the film since he was hamstrung by Seton I. Miller’s screenplay, which was adapted from Graham Greene’s 1943 novel (Lang admired the novel and had wanted to adapt it himself, but Paramount beat him to the rights). In an interview with Peter Bogdanovich, Lang claims that he was “terribly shocked” when he read Miller’s screenplay and tried unsuccessfully to get out of his contract. “I had signed a contract and I had to fulfill it,” he said, “and that’s all. I saw it recently on television, where it was cut to pieces, and I fell asleep.”

Ministry of Fear (1944) [The Criterion Collection #649] [Re-UP]

Lang, who was given to hyperbole and exaggeration regarding his own life and films, perhaps sells himself a bit short. Ministry of Fear is far from his greatest film, but it is hardly the soulless piece of studio hackery he makes it out to be. While most of the film’s problems can be traced back to the coincidences and stretches of credulity required by Miller’s screenplay (a villain all too conveniently killed in a bomb blast that all too conveniently allows a crucial piece of cake to survive intact, despite leaving an enormous crater in the ground, for example), Lang brings to the film a sometimes startling visual acuity that plays beautifully on noir-ish themes of paranoia, claustrophobia, and nightmare. As a whole the film doesn’t quite pull together, but it is filled with isolated moments of tense brilliance and visual panache.

Ministry of Fear (1944) [The Criterion Collection #649] [Re-UP]

The protagonist is Stephen Neale (Ray Milland), a variation on Hitchcock’s wrongfully accused innocent on the run from both the police and the true villains. The twist is that Neale isn’t entirely innocent: When we first meet him, he is being released from a mental asylum for a then-unstated crime for which he paid two years of his life. It is later revealed that he was put away not only for murder, but for the murder of his wife, although the exact nature of the killing is clarified in a way that eventually sheds sympathetic light on what would otherwise be seen as a heinous crime.

Ministry of Fear (1944) [The Criterion Collection #649] [Re-UP]

After buying a ticket to London against the advice of his doctor, who reminds him that it is being blitzed nightly by the Germans, he wanders into a charity carnival, where he has his palm read and ends up winning a cake that was intended for someone else. That twist of fate puts Neale in the deadly crosshairs of a shadowy group of Nazi agents that wants him dead and whatever was hidden in the cake in their possession.

Ministry of Fear (1944) [The Criterion Collection #649] [Re-UP]

With no one to turn to, Neale takes it upon himself to ferret out his would-be killers in London, which leads him first to a comical drunk of a private investigator named George Rennit (Erskine Sanford) and later to the offices of the charity where he won the cake, which is run by a brother and sister from Austria, Carla (Marjorie Reynolds) and Willi (Carl Esmond). They are willing to help, but in a Lang film, no one is to be trusted, and the eagerness of characters with Germanic accents to assist him carries with it a whiff of a double-cross in the making. Neale crosses paths with other potentially nefarious characters, as well, including an icy, platinum blonde clairvoyant (a psychic fatale?) who leads a séance that results in a murder for which Neale is blamed. He is also being constantly trailed by a sinister figure (Percy Waram) in a black overcoat who casts a menacing shadow even when sitting in a chair trimming his fingernails - never a good sign in a Lang film.

Ministry of Fear (1944) [The Criterion Collection #649] [Re-UP]

Working with veteran cinematographer Henry Sharp (who had shot King Vidor’s The Crowd in 1928), Lang imbues even the most benign of locations with a sense of unease, which gives the entire film a slightly uncanny quality. The machinations of the plot are loud and fairly clumsy, with unanswered questions and conveniences that serve the screenwriter but not the story (the growing romance between Neale and Carla feels particularly strained, despite good performances by both Milland and Reynolds), yet Lang molds it into something that is consistently entertaining and at times genuinely enthralling.

Ministry of Fear (1944) [The Criterion Collection #649] [Re-UP]

The film as a whole doesn’t really stick with you, but isolated moments and images do: an almost surreal chase through a marsh while bombs fall in the background, two unexpected gunshots in complete darkness, a villain dialing a phone with an obscenely large pair of phallic scissors. Without fully cohering, these bits and pieces burrow into your consciousness and stay there—the true hallmark of Lang’s unique cinematic sensibility.
Ministry of Fear (1944) [The Criterion Collection #649] [Re-UP]

Special Features:
- New 2K digital restoration
- New interview with Fritz Lang scholar Joe McElhaney
- Trailer

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