All Through the Night
Broadway gamblers stumble across a plan by Nazi saboteurs to blow up an American battleship.
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- Cast:
- Humphrey Bogart , Conrad Veidt , Kaaren Verne , Jane Darwell , Frank McHugh , Peter Lorre , Judith Anderson
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Reviews
Best movie of this year hands down!
There are better movies of two hours length. I loved the actress'performance.
Fun premise, good actors, bad writing. This film seemed to have potential at the beginning but it quickly devolves into a trite action film. Ultimately it's very boring.
Unshakable, witty and deeply felt, the film will be paying emotional dividends for a long, long time.
When I was 10 years old, I thought "All Through the Night" was a terrific movie. There was Humphrey Bogart as a tough-guy gambler socking it to the Nazis, taking on Conrad Veidt as a Prussian mastermind and Peter Lorre as a sloe-eyed killer. Looking at it now, "All Through the Night" seems obvious and dopey. Take a meeting of the fifth columnists somewhere in L.A. Bogart starts spouting double talk and the packed hall keeps sieg heiling as if he makes sense. Then there's the confusion over a woman Bogie suspects is a spy until he discovers that her father was gassed at Dachau. His reaction. "Dachau, what's Dachau?" Duh!!! William Demarest and Frank McHugh contribute streotyped characters and a young actor named Jackie C. Gleason (yep that Jackie Gleason, minus the C) has a small shot as an inveterate gambler. Why do I think that "All Through the Night" was among the films that made Bogie pleased to say farewell to Warner Brothers.
All Through the Night (1941) ** 1/2 (out of 4) Bizarre, silly and over the top picture from Warner has a racketeer (Humphrey Bogart) getting mixed up with a strange woman (Kaaren Verne) who just happens to be involved with a group of Nazis (Conrad Veidt, Peter Lorre). Towards the end of the picture there's a joke involving Superman and that type of pulp adventure is what's best to expect when going into this film. I was really shocked to see so much humor thrown around considering the subject matter but this isn't your typical WWII flick. The movie mixes the gangster, spy and comedy genres fairly well and while the end results aren't a classic film, at the same time it's so original that you can't help but be entertained. I think the best thing going for the film is its cast even if a few of the members are underused. We get Bogart doing nice work as the tough guy we all love to see him play. He handles all the action scenes quite well and he even gets a few good one-liners. Veidt is rather stiff in his role but I mean that in a good way as his stern performance mixes up good against the humor in the film. Lorre doesn't get enough to do but he adds fun whenever he is on screen. Warner funny man Frank McHugh gets several good scenes and we can also spot a young Jackie Gleason in a supporting role. I really wasn't too thrilled with Verne who I found to be quite boring as she didn't add any chemistry to the film. None of the genres mixed in here work on their own but seeing them mashed together in one film at least keeps the thing moving even though it's incredibly silly. Nothing great and certainly not a classic but fans of Bogie will want to check it out.
Investigating the murder of his cheesecake supplier, a sports promoter uncovers a Nazi spy ring in this tongue-in-cheek film that had the misfortune of being released the week of the Pearl Harbor bombing, when America was in no mood for a light-hearted movie about the Nazis. The film is quite amusing, thanks to the witty dialog and fast pace. Bogart is cool and playful as a shady character named "Gloves," and Demarest and McHugh provide most of the laughs as his sidekicks. Veidt, Lorre, and Anderson are appropriately vile as the Nazis. Of course Bogart, Veidt, and Lorre would reunite the following year for "Casablanca." Some of the scenes foreshadow "North by Northwest."
This wartime film is many things, I suggest: a crackling good mystery caper; a delightful comedy; an effective propaganda piece again Nazis; and a delightful comedy all rolled into one. The heart of the story is Alfred "Gloves" Donahue, played by Humphrey Bogart. He and his small mob of Damon Runyonesque holdovers from the 1930s are living on Bogart's brain as a smart gambler. He has a house, a servant, cuddly mobsters played by William Demarest, Frank McHugh and Jackie Gleason, and a mother in the person of Jane Darwell. Her 'feeling" that something is wrong involves him in the murder of his friend Miller, maker of his daily cheesecake, and in the pursuit of a girl played by Kaaren Verne implicated in the man's death. He tracks her to a nightclub owned by another veteran of Prohibition, Barton MacLane and his second Edward Brophy as "Joe". Bogart questions Verne who seems troubled, and argues with her pianist, Pepi, played by Peter Lorre. Suspecting something is wrong, after agreeing under pressure to leave the place, Bogart returns and finds Joe dying; the man holds up one open hand--then expires. Bogart forgets a glove and is fingered as Joe's killer by an angry MacLane. Deciding to avoid the cops, whom he hears on the radio are after him, Bogart takes Demarest with him to search a suspect building instead. Demarest is kidnapped; and searching for him, Bogart has to kill a man who tries to murder him; the assassin falls to his death. Bogart continues his search of the building while his assistant, McHugh waits in an auction gallery. Bogart has met the leader of the bad guys, and his assistant, played by Conrad Veidt and Judith Anderson. He tries to rescue Verne, but she clobbers him to save him from being shot by Pepi from behind. McHugh is thrown out of the gallery, but when Verne returns, she helps a tied up Bogart and Demarest to escape. Instead, he rifles a desk then goes after Ebbing (Veidt), knocks him out and forces Verne to go with them as they escape. The three fugitives race into Central Park, pursued by a car filled with villains. While Bogart dispatches one of them, Verne--who has revealed she's only been helping the bad guys' scheme to save her father--finds a paper Bogart had picked up, along with an address book earlier, revealing that her father is dead. Bogart and Verne book a room and then send for the police; but Ebbing captures them first and turns them over to the police, before vanishing. Bogart and Verne try to explain what's going on to Lt. Forbes, played by James Burke; they go back to the building--but the evidence has all been removed. So Bogart escapes, in a hail of bullets. Back at Bogart's house, MacLane breaks in on Donahue's people, to take him in for having killed his partner. Bogart has arrived, just in time to tell him he's found "fifth columnists"--"five" was what a dying Joe tried to warn him about with his upraised hand. Finding the place to which Ebbing has moved a big meeting he talked about earlier, Bogart and Demarest replace two men they slug and end up addressing that meeting as "munitions experts" from out of town, after Ebbing had spoken of the group's glorious coming 'action'. Bogart figures out the action--mines planted in the way of a US destroyer in the harbor. MacLane and Bogart's men arrive just then to overwhelm the pro-Nazis; but Bogart follows Ebbing who runs out--and is captured and forced to drive a powerboat Ebbing has prepared to ram into the destroyer, now that the original plan has been stopped, in a suicidal act of defiance. This synopsis may sound like an adventure; but the film is handled with verve and style as a comedy by all concerned. Vincent Sherman directed, admirably, from a literate script by Leo Rosten, Leonard Spigelgass and Edwin Gilbert. Bogart is very good as Gloves, with Veidt, Ludwig Stossell, Peter Lorre and Burke taking second honors. Kaaren Verne, Wallace Ford, Phil Silvers, William Demarest, Frank McHugh and Jackie Gleason are all fine. Martin Kosleck, Jean Ames, Irene Seidner, Emory Parnell, Ben Welden, Sam McDaniel and Jane Darwell and Judith Anderson round out the main cast. Jerry Wald produced with Hal B. Wallis; Sindey Hickox did a sterling job as director photography, in a film eerily presaging "the Untouchables" TV show. Max Parker did the art direction, with gowns by Howard Shoup. This is a surprising, inventive and entertaining film, I argue, one whose dialogue is played to the hilt by all concerned. The gag lines hold up surprisingly well, it is an attractively mounted and a thoroughgoing sleeper as an entertainment piece. I recommend it highly.