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Man Hunt (1941)
In director Fritz Lang's anti-Nazi, WWII political
thriller - a film-noirish story set on the eve of the war, about
a suave English gentleman adventurer pursued by the Nazis for threatening
to assassinate Hitler:
- the film's opening - the tense sequence of big-game
hunter Capt. Alan Thorndike (Walter Pidgeon) stalking within shooting
distance of Hitler's summer palace (Berchtesgaden) in the Bavarian
Alps in the mid-summer of 1939, and being tempted to aim at the
dictator's head and chest with a precision telescopic viewer, and
pul the trigger - the gun was unloaded and clicked empty; then,
he gave a salute-wave to the Fuhrer, paused for a moment, and then
thought about committing the assassination for real; Thorndike
loaded a cartridge into the rifle, but he was jumped by a German
Nazi sentry as he pulled the trigger a second time, and the shot
went wild - he later claimed
- the scene of Thorndike's capture and incarceration
- brought before the brutal Gestapo, led by white-uniformed, monocle-wearing
chief Major Quive-Smith (George Sanders); although Thorndike claimed
"It was a sporting stalk...stalking the game you're after for
the fun of it, not to kill...the sport is in the chase, not the kill.
I don't kill any longer, not even small game"; nevertheless, he
was compelled to sign a confession (that he had acted as an assassin
for the British government), but he refused, so he was forced to submit
to beatings and torture ("How well do you stand pain?") (off-screen)
and a scheduled execution
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Thorndike - Identified and Questioned by Major
Quive-Smith
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- Thorndike ultimately survived being pushed off
a 'treacherous' cliff ledge (his death was to be made to look like
an accident) when his backpack became caught in a tree and it cushioned
his fall; after regaining consciousness, he evaded a search by
bloodhounds, and escaped from Europe to England (by stowing away
on a Danish steamship with the aid of an English cabin boy Vaner
(Roddy McDowall)) during a massive pursuit and man-hunt by German
Nazi spies looking for him
- the growing romance after London Cockney streetwalker/seamstress
Jerry Stokes (Joan Bennett) helped Thorndike to evade Germans during
their search - and his thankful purchase of a "dangerous weapon" for
her - a hatpin made of chromium (in the shape of an arrow) to decorate
her beret - given with his "undying gratitude and admiration"
- during his flight, there was a tense sequence of a
pursuit in a dark subway tunnel of the London Underground, when one
of Quive-Smith's men, German agent Mr. Jones (John Carradine) with
a long sharp blade hidden inside his walking stick, stalked after
Thorndike and after a hand-to-hand struggle in the tube, was electrocuted
when he was punched and fell backwards onto the electrified third
rail (with sparks flying); subsequently during the investigation
into the "TUBE MURDER MYSTERY," Jones (who had acquired
Thorndike's passport and billfold) was identified as the dead hunter
Thorndike in newspaper headlines: ("MURDER IN THE UNDERGROUND
- Capt. Alan Thorndike's Body Found"); a male murder suspect
at the scene (Thorndike himself, with a scar on his right cheek)
was reported to have escaped; now both the British police and the
Nazis were both engaged in a man-hunt, searching for Thorndike
Mr. Jones' Deadly Chase After Thorndike in the
London Underground Tube
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- the concluding scene was the confrontation between
Quive-Smith who had located and entrapped Thorndike in his cave-hideout
in the woods; through a tiny opening in the cave wall, he passed
in Jerry's beret with the chromium arrow hat-pin hanging on a stick
- signifying her death; he explained how that during their search,
the Germans questioned her and threw her out of a window when she
wouldn't betray him: ("She made your mistake, Thorndike, she
flauted obvious power. She refused to tell us anything...She was
found dead in the street, Thorndike. The police reported that she,
uh, jumped to her death from a window")
- then, after Thorndike angrily admitted that he had
wanted to personally kill the Fuhrer, Quive-Smith strongly urged
and forced him to sign the confessional document - he said it would
help the Germans who had just invaded Poland that same day (September
1, 1939): ("Today Europe, tomorrow the world!"); while
stalling for time, Thorndike fabricated a makeshift bow (with his
belt and a strip of wood) and used Jerry's chromium hat-pin as an
arrow (strapped to the stick); then, through the hole in the cave
wall, he shot the arrow and mortally-wounded Quive-Smith in the side
of the head; however, the German was able to shoot and wound Thorndike
before expiring; Thorndike was able to crawl over to Quive-Smith's
corpse and destroy the false inflammatory signed confession by tearing
it with his teeth
- during his long recuperation, Thorndike experienced
flashbacks to double-exposed memories of Jerry, who had helped him
during their brief romance; in the film's denouement set during WWII,
the healed Thorndike had joined the British RAF a year later, and
was on a bombing mission over Germany; unexpectedly, he parachuted
into Germany's Third Reich - his reconnaissance objective this time
was to really assassinate Hitler with his hunting rifle, as the narrator
patriotically described (in voice-over) his mission in the film's
last lines, to the tune of "My Country 'Tis of Thee": ("And
from now on, somewhere within Germany, is a man with a precision
rifle and the high degree of intelligence and training that is required
to use it. It may be days, months or even years, but this time he
clearly knows his purpose and, unflinching, faces his destiny")
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During His Recuperation: Flashbacks to Cockney
Prostitute Jerry Stokes
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Ending: Thorndike Parachuting Into Germany With
a Mission to Assassinate Hitler
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Aiming an Unloaded Rifle at the Fuhrer
Below the Cliff, Thorndike's Backpack Snagged on a Tree
Thorndike Regaining Consciousness After Cliff Fall
Thorndike's Purchase of a Chromium Arrow for Streetwalker
Jerry's Beret
Jerry's Hat with Arrow
Thorndike's Makeshift Bow - Pulling It Back and Aiming
The Target Seen Through Cave Opening: Quive-Smith's Head
Mortally-Wounded Quive-Smith Shooting Thorndike Before
Dying
Wounded Thorndike Destroying False Confession With
His Teeth
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