In post-WW2 Europe, when the dictator of a small police state dies during surgery, the operating surgeon, who's a visiting American doctor, is held captive in order to preserve the terrible ... Read allIn post-WW2 Europe, when the dictator of a small police state dies during surgery, the operating surgeon, who's a visiting American doctor, is held captive in order to preserve the terrible state secret.In post-WW2 Europe, when the dictator of a small police state dies during surgery, the operating surgeon, who's a visiting American doctor, is held captive in order to preserve the terrible state secret.
- Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
- 2 nominations total
- Janovic Prada
- (as Carl Jaffé)
- …
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe film is set in the mythical country of "Vosnia", which, according to director Sidney Gilliat, was meant to suggest either Spain (to left-wingers) or what was then Yugoslavia (to right-wingers). A special "Vosnian" language was devised for the film by Georgina Shield, a teacher at the London School of Languages, and several of the actors took lessons in how to speak it over a period of several days, as it is extensively heard in the film.
- GoofsAt the river docks, a London bus is visible in the background passing over the bridge. The stern of the barge shown is also very clearly that of an English narrow boat, found nowhere on the Continent.
- Quotes
Dr. John Marlowe: [when Lisa offers to let him stay overnight in her room] What will your sisters think?
Lisa Robinson: They are not my sisters; and they have nothing to think with.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Beyond Recognition (2003)
- SoundtracksPaper Doll
(uncredited)
Written by Johnny Black
Performed by Glynis Johns, Olga Lowe and Therese Van Kye
STATE SECRET was a British film starring Douglas Fairbanks Jr., Jack Hawkins, Glynnis Johns, and Herbert Lom. Vacationing in a Balkan state that is not totally Communist (read Yugoslavia), Fairbanks is pressured by the head of the Secret Service (Hawkins) into operating on the Genreralisimo (a type of elderly version of Tito) who is gravely ill. When, after an initial period where the patient is responding well to the operation, the dictator dies, Fairbanks realizes that his life is in danger (Hawkins can't have the death of the dictator revealed so early - there has to be a replacement ready in the wings). Fairbanks' adventures in fleeing (aided by Johns and Lom) are the basis of the plot.
I find the sociological background to Latin American politics in CRISIS better than the Balkan background to STATE SECRET, but there are nice touches. Hawkins is a dangerous foe, but he is a man with an astute political brain. Lom (playing his normal villainous type: a blackmailing scoundrel) turns in a superb comic performance when he unwittingly stumbles on a secret he'd prefer never knowing at all. Fairbanks Jr. was always underrated as an actor, because too many critics saw him as trying to carry on the tradition of swashbuckling films his father made famous in the silent period. But he was better than that, and shows real, growing concern for Johns and her safety as the film continues.
If possible try to see this and CRISIS together, to see which one is better. I bet you will find that an impossible choice. Enjoy them both.
- theowinthrop
- Apr 24, 2005
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Državna tajna
- Filming locations
- Dolomites, Italy(mountain scenes)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 37 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1