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Blackout

Original title: Contraband
  • 1940
  • Approved
  • 1h 20m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
1.5K
YOUR RATING
Blackout (1940)
CrimeDramaRomanceThrillerWar

Early in World War II, Danish sea captain Andersen, delayed in a British port, tangles with German spies.Early in World War II, Danish sea captain Andersen, delayed in a British port, tangles with German spies.Early in World War II, Danish sea captain Andersen, delayed in a British port, tangles with German spies.

  • Director
    • Michael Powell
  • Writers
    • Emeric Pressburger
    • Michael Powell
    • Brock Williams
  • Stars
    • Conrad Veidt
    • Valerie Hobson
    • Hay Petrie
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    1.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Michael Powell
    • Writers
      • Emeric Pressburger
      • Michael Powell
      • Brock Williams
    • Stars
      • Conrad Veidt
      • Valerie Hobson
      • Hay Petrie
    • 30User reviews
    • 14Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos6

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    Top cast50

    Edit
    Conrad Veidt
    Conrad Veidt
    • Capt. Andersen
    Valerie Hobson
    Valerie Hobson
    • Mrs. Sorensen
    Hay Petrie
    Hay Petrie
    • Axel Skold…
    Joss Ambler
    Joss Ambler
    • Lt. Cmdr. Ashton, RNR
    Raymond Lovell
    • Van Dyne
    Esmond Knight
    Esmond Knight
    • Mr. Pidgeon
    Charles Victor
    Charles Victor
    • Hendrick
    Phoebe Kershaw
    • Miss Lang
    Harold Warrender
    Harold Warrender
    • Lt. Cmdr. Ellis, RN
    John Longden
    John Longden
    • Passport Officer
    Eric Maturin
    Eric Maturin
    • Passport Officer
    Paddy Browne
    • Singer in 'Regency'
    Henry Wolston
    Henry Wolston
    • First Danish Waiter
    Julian Vedey
    • Second Danish Waiter
    Sidney Monckton
    • Third Danish Waiter
    • (as Sydney Moncton)
    Hamilton Keene
    • Fourth Danish Waiter
    • (as Hamilton Keen)
    Leo Genn
    Leo Genn
    • First Brother Grimm
    Stuart Latham
    • Second Brother Grimm
    • Director
      • Michael Powell
    • Writers
      • Emeric Pressburger
      • Michael Powell
      • Brock Williams
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews30

    6.91.4K
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    Featured reviews

    8LeonLouisRicci

    Surreal at Times & Expressionistic Wartime Michael Powell Movie

    Early British Wartime Effort from Director Michael Powell. It has a Light Touch with Some Amazing Noirish Flourishes. A Male-Female Team of Conrad Veidt and Valerie Hobson are Thrown Together Against Some Nazis and the Adventure Takes Them Through London Blackouts and Underground Cement Caverns with Secret Entrances and Ominous Elevators.

    Beneath Nightclubs with Gaudy Fashions and Cuisine and Floor Shows Like "White Negro" that are Quite Bizarre, as is a Musical Group of Female Banjo Pickers with Artificial Glass Legs. It is All Rather Surreal.

    Our Heroes get to Engage Banter with Some Sexual Innuendos and a Bondage Scene as They Combine Efforts for an Entertaining Romp that May be a bit Heavy on the Humor but the Thing Works Wonderfully.

    It is Michael Powell's Inventive Camera Work and Expressionism that Makes this Stand Out and One can See that the British were Developing, as were Their American Cousins, a Seemingly Unconscious Style of Filmmaking that would Become Known as Film-Noir in its Various Degrees of Genre Bending and Definition.
    ekarle

    Marvelous light-hearted spy adventure

    The plot is well paced and fun, although a bit convoluted. But, Conrad Veidt and Valerie Hobson are the hidden pleasures in this film. She's beautiful and witty. He's tall (very), handsome, and debonaire. Together they're very sexy: their relationship here is reminiscent of that of William Powell and Myrna Loy in the Thin Man and Cary Grant and Eva Marie Saint in North-By-Northwest. The scene in which they break the bonds in which the villains have tied them is wonderfully erotic. Above all, Contraband demonstrates how film makers (outside of Powell and Pressberger) missed the boat in not taking advantage of Veidt's sophisticated persona, understated acting skills, and comedic flair.
    7AlsExGal

    British spy thriller...

    ... from British National Films and director Michael Powell. Danish merchant ship's Captain Andersen (Conrad Veidt) is irritated enough when his ship is ordered into dock for inspection for contraband by British authorities. It only gets worse when two passengers, Mrs. Sorensen (Valeriea Hobson) and Mr. Pidgeon (Esmond Knight), sneak off the ship. Captain Andersen tracks them down through the darkness of London in an enforced blackout, only to end up targeted by a Nazi spy ring.

    There's a light-heartedness that runs through this entertaining thriller. Veidt, cast against type, is good as the put-upon ship's captain that just wants to get back home. Hobson is excellent as the mysterious Mrs. Sorensen. Some of the comic relief bits with Hay Petrie in a dual role can get a bit long, but it's not too awful. Contraband was the original British release title, which was changed to Blackout for the US market, as well as having 12 minutes shaved off the running time.
    7max von meyerling

    A delightful war time romantic romp, with just a touch of healthy S&M

    What a delightful film this is. It's true that this film is concocted out of the same ingredients of contemporary Hitchcock film - spy suspense and romance between stand offish lovers wrapped up in a crust of a comedy of manners but it's interesting to see the results from a different chef. There is even a climactic scene in a factory which makes busts of Neville Chamberlain. The little sexual mushrooms that Hitchcock likes to strew through his films are here even more perverse with particular emphasis on bondage and pain. Here is Conrad Veidt at his most affable and most romantic, hardly the same man who pisses ice cubes he was in Casablanca, his most indelible role. Valerie Hobson is the perfect combination of repressed middle class woman and devil may care adventuress. They have a brilliant chemistry together, sort of a neo-lithic Steed and Peel. It remains to be seen if any film today can ever capture this type of pairing, with the forthcoming MR. & MRS. SMITH (itself an old Hitchcock title) promising a cartoon like special effects and martial arts based attempt at mutual destruction. O tempes, o mores.

    The action can be a little more than the merely concocted. As in farce, people do certain things in certain ways, its seems, just to keep the story moving along. So there are massive plot holes. Its the old John Ford story, about why he didn't have the Indians simply shoot the horses in STAGECOACH (if they did there wouldn't be a movie!). There was another reason d'etre for CONTRABAND - wartime British propaganda.

    CONTRABAND was made with the co-operation of two British Government ministries including the Office of Economic Warfare. It would seem that one film's goals was to create a positive sympathy among Scandinavians by having the lions share of defeating the Nazi spy ring accomplished by the hereto neutral Danes handily recruited from a restaurant evocatively named The Viking. This British hope of support was before the German invasion of Denmark and the instantaneous crumbling of Danish military defenses. The climactic fight in the factory making heroic busts of Neville Chamberlain was not meant to be ironic (a bust is used to knock out a spy followed with a Bond like quip "They said he was tough."). It is doubtful that two government ministries would have co-operated with a film which made fun of the Prime Minister during wartime. In fact all Civil servants and serving military men are seen as competent, thoughtful efficient and humane. But all of these elements are held subtly in the background, as is a virtual encyclopedia of ordinary life in London, especially the demands of the blackout.

    However all these are subsidiary interests to the real focus of the film, the relationship between Veidt and Hobson. In many way this was a repackaging of their pairing in a previous Powell film, THE SPY IN BLACK, which ends, in romantic terms, unsatisfactorily, i.e. she goes back to her husband and he dies. Here they go on together, no doubt spending the next few years giving the Jerrys conniption fits, in and out of bondage. Oh yes. There is bondage, perhaps even freakier than in a Hitchcock film. There is no mistaking the B&D complete with a pillar.The good old days when you could get right to the edge and it would be read as merely the hero and heroine being tied up but no mistake, this is the real thing.
    7atlasmb

    An Enjoyable Wartime Cat-and-mouse Intrigue

    "Contraband" has been frequently compared to the works of Hitchcock, which is no surprise. There is an air of suspense and danger as the two main characters, Captain Andersen (Conrad Veidt) and Mrs. Sorensen (Valerie Hobson), traverse a British city in the darkness of a wartime blackout. The viewer is asked to accompany them, never quite knowing what forces are at play or who are the "good guys". The film also feels a little like "Casablanca", with shadowy, nefarious forces at work while the couple is drawn together emotionally.

    Also, like Hitchcock, there is a very playful side to the action. The manners of society are observed while threatening subtexts are played out. Andersen and Sorensen, likewise--in the early part of the film--play a cat-and-mouse game that is enjoyable to watch.

    The mechanics of the plot don't seem to matter much, like one of Hitchcock's McGuffins, and the photography seems more about style than substance. Filmed in B&W, of course, the story slinks in and out of darkened passageways, foggy ports and backrooms.

    This film is a lot of fun to watch, especially if one just enjoys the action without trying to decipher the finer points of the intrigue.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      When Michael Powell and the crew went on location to Ramsgate (Eastgate in the film), they sent all their luggage and equipment in cases boldly marked "Contraband". Luckily the local wartime Contraband Controllers saw the funny side and when they arrived at the hotel they found their cases had stamps and stencils all over them saying things like "Explosives", "Examined", "Condemned".
    • Quotes

      Miss Lang: If you're not Mr Pidgeon, then who are you ?

      Captain Anderson: My name is Anderson, Hans Anderson.

      First Brother Grimm: And we Sir are the Brothers Grimm.

    • Crazy credits
      "White Negro Cabaret" Designed & executed by Hedley Briggs
    • Alternate versions
      Eight minutes were cut from Contraband for its U.S. release; some just snips here and there, others more major. The most regrettable loss is the opening minutes of Veidt's and Hobson's table scene at the Three Vikings Restaurant, which in the U.S. version begins at the point when Veidt and Hobson begin drinking together and look at Veidt's watch. Another cut sequence shows black male dancers and white female dancers in a nightclub production number [The "White Negro" cabaret designed & executed by Hedley Briggs], a racial combination that would have outraged much of white America at the time, especially in the Southern states.
    • Connections
      Featured in The South Bank Show: Michael Powell (1986)
    • Soundtracks
      Face in the Crowd
      (uncredited)

      Music by Richard Addinsell

      Lyrics by Nicholas Phipps

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    FAQ14

    • How long is Blackout?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 29, 1940 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Languages
      • English
      • Danish
    • Also known as
      • Ratni krijumcari
    • Filming locations
      • Chester Square, Belgravia, London, England, UK(Mrs. Sorenson's Aunt's House)
    • Production company
      • British National Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • £47,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 20m(80 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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