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The House on 92nd Street (1945)
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Overview
User Rating:
Release Date:
10 September 1945 (USA) moreTagline:
The F.B.I.'s own tense, terrific story behind the protection of the ATOMIC BOMB! morePlot:
Bill Dietrich becomes a double agent for the FBI in a Nazi spy ring. full summary | add synopsisAwards:
Won Oscar. Another 1 win moreUser Comments:
Viewed as a period piece, semi-documentary about Nazi espionage still holds interest moreCast
(Complete credited cast)| William Eythe | ... | Bill Dietrich | |
| Lloyd Nolan | ... | Agent George A. Briggs | |
| Signe Hasso | ... | Elsa Gebhardt | |
| Gene Lockhart | ... | Charles Ogden Roper | |
| Leo G. Carroll | ... | Col. Hammersohn | |
| Lydia St. Clair | ... | Johanna Schmidt | |
| William Post Jr. | ... | Walker (as William Post) | |
| Harry Bellaver | ... | Max Cobura | |
| Bruno Wick | ... | Adolf Lange | |
| Harro Meller | ... | Conrad Arnulf | |
| Charles Wagenheim | ... | Gustav Hausmann | |
| Alfred Linder | ... | Adolf Klein | |
| Renee Carson | ... | Luise Vadja |
Additional Details
Parents Guide:
Add content advisory for parentsRuntime:
88 minCountry:
USAColor:
Black and WhiteAspect Ratio:
1.37 : 1 moreSound Mix:
Mono (Western Electric Mirrophonic Recording)Fun Stuff
Trivia:
Many of the bit roles in this film were played by real FBI agents, and this was their only film. moreGoofs:
Continuity: When the agents are preparing to do the first survey of the house they are wearing CD (Civil Defense) arm bands on their right arms. The next scene shows them approaching the house and the arm bands are now on their left arms. moreSoundtrack:
You Say the Sweetest Things (Baby) moreFAQ
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This is the story of how the FBI supposedly cracked a Nazi espionage ring on the trail of Manhattan Project (the A-Bomb) in the early years of World War II. As a movie, its chief significance is that it kicked off a spate of semi-documentary movies paying tribute to one or another of the U.S. government's law enforcement agencies and celebrating Our Tax Dollars at Work. Such films became a staple of the noir cycle; a few of them even achieved distinction (T-Men, for instance).
William Eythe, a young American, is recruited by and trained in Germany to be a spy; in fact he works as a double agent for the FBI. The film, shot largely on location, traces the actions of the nest of vipers on New York's upper east side. Their unofficial master seems to be Signe Hasso, under cover of running a chic dress boutique. Her opposite number, who runs Eythe, is Lloyd Nolan (who was to reprise his role as Inspector Briggs in subsequent films).
The film's period flavor keeps it from seeming too dated, because the spying looks quite primitive to audiences spoiled by James Bond gimmickry and later, even more sophisticated, espionage thrillers. And, from a modern perspective, the smug boastfulness about the Bureau's -- and America's -- infallibility becomes a bit hard to swallow. There's little texture or nuance in the film, but, as a quasi-historical document, it exerts its own fascination.