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poster of 13 Rue Madeleine
Rating: 5.9/10 by 35 users

13 Rue Madeleine (1947)

Bob Sharkey, an instructor of would-be spies for the Allied Office of Strategic Services, becomes suspicious of one of the latest batch of students, Bill O'Connell, who is too good at espionage. His boss, Charles Gibson confirms that O'Connell is really a top German agent, but tells Sharkey to pass him, as they intend to feed the mole false information about the impending D-Day invasion.

Directing:
  • Henry Hathaway
  • Abe Steinberg
Writing:
  • John Monks Jr.
  • Sy Bartlett
Stars:
Release Date: Wed, Jan 15, 1947

Rating: 5.9/10 by 35 users

Alternative Title:
13 rue Madeleine - FR

Country:
United States of America
Language:
English
Français
Runtime: 01 hour 35 minutes
Budget: $0
Revenue: $0

Plot Keyword: espionage, spy, world war ii, d-day

James Cagney
Robert Emmett 'Bob' Sharkey
Annabella
Suzanne de Beaumont
Richard Conte
William H. 'Bill' O'Connell
Frank Latimore
Jeff Lassiter
Walter Abel
Charles Gibson
Melville Cooper
Pappy Simpson
Sam Jaffe
Mayor Galimard
Karl Malden
Jump Master (uncredited)
Judith Lowry
Peasant Woman (uncredited)
Reed Hadley
Narrator (voice) (uncredited)
Dick Wessel
Gestapo Officer (uncredited)
Dick Gordon
Psychiatrist (scenes deleted)
Julius Cramer
German Officer (uncredited)

CinemaSerf

James Cagney leads quite an efficient cast in this superior WWII espionage thriller. He heads a special outfit (077 not 007) charged with helping the resistance. The curious thing is that he, and the audience, know that he has a spy in the midst of his team - and we all now exactly whom that person is. What follows is a cleverly constructed cat and mouse game as they try to play him in order to find out how he communicates his treason and to whom. Cagney stands out, but Annabella ("Madame de Beaumont") and both Richard Conte ("O'Connell") and Frank Latimore ("Lassister") work well too, to keep the suspense running well for much of this 90 minute adventure. The story has plenty of action, only a modicum of romance to clutter up the drama and it delivers a strong sense of just how perilous the lives of these fighters, and their counter-espionage colleagues, actually was in the occupied territories. It does take a while to build up steam, and I could have been doing without the rather oppressively dramatic narrative from rent-a-voice Reed Hadley but this is certainly well worth a watch.


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