A juror in a murder trial, after voting to convict, has second thoughts and begins to investigate on his own before the execution.A juror in a murder trial, after voting to convict, has second thoughts and begins to investigate on his own before the execution.A juror in a murder trial, after voting to convict, has second thoughts and begins to investigate on his own before the execution.
John Mylong
- John Stuart
- (as Jack Mylong-Münz)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaA copy of the film is included as a bonus feature on the Kino Lorber Studio Classics DVD and German DVD releases of Murder! (1930) and the French DVD release of Jamaica Inn (1939).
- GoofsAs Sir John interviews Mary in jail, it is established in long-shot that both are sitting at opposite ends of a long table. During frontal closeups, the widths of the planks that make up the tabletop reveal that very randomly either the table is turning between shots or both persons repeatedly switch places.
The exact same continuity error also applies to the American version of the movie, Murder! (1930).
- ConnectionsAlternate-language version of Murder! (1930)
Featured review
For Hitchcock completists only, this German-language version of the same director's Murder! tells the same story on the same sets, but with different cast, as a juror questions the guilty verdict he helped come to.
A few mildly amusing visual flairs are present here: jurors seated around a circular table. The camera pans along and we see a first juror held deep in thought; the next several are listening with rapt attention; until we arrive at one man who is clearly bored to tears with it all; a mild joke which was thrown in to the German version, not in the UK version. Brief glimpses (again) of cross-dressing, which Hitch later went back to, in a big way, with Psycho.
Some early quick cuts are surprising, eleven cuts in a three seconds-long scene at the twenty three minute mark. Most unconventional at the time.
Overall the movie is watchable, but not very involving, partly at least due to its lax pacing, and a verbose screenplay. Like its UK counterpart, however, it does pick up for its memorable climax.
A few mildly amusing visual flairs are present here: jurors seated around a circular table. The camera pans along and we see a first juror held deep in thought; the next several are listening with rapt attention; until we arrive at one man who is clearly bored to tears with it all; a mild joke which was thrown in to the German version, not in the UK version. Brief glimpses (again) of cross-dressing, which Hitch later went back to, in a big way, with Psycho.
Some early quick cuts are surprising, eleven cuts in a three seconds-long scene at the twenty three minute mark. Most unconventional at the time.
Overall the movie is watchable, but not very involving, partly at least due to its lax pacing, and a verbose screenplay. Like its UK counterpart, however, it does pick up for its memorable climax.
- Zbigniew_Krycsiwiki
- Aug 9, 2013
- Permalink
Details
- Runtime1 hour 18 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.20 : 1
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