Bei Anruf Mord (1954)

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Bei Anruf Mord: Directed by Alfred Hitchcock. With Ray Milland, Grace Kelly, Robert Cummings, John Williams. A former tennis player tries to arrange his wife’s murder after learning of her affair.

“Tony Wendice (Ray Milland), an ex-tennis player, unhappily married to Margot (Grace Kelly), correctly guesses that she has been cheating, with Mark Halliday (Robert Cummings). Mark writes crime stories. Unbeknown to Margot and Mark, Tony knows about the affair, and wants to teach Margot a little lesson, by taking away the thing that is her life. But, being too guileful to do it himself, Wendice blackmails one of his old school friends into murdering her, and the essential thing to doing it is his latchkey.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eDial M for Murder succeeds on many levels, and it is largely thanks to some superb dialogue, written from a tricksy-yet-capable script that never gets too deep. The cast are a treat. Ray Milland is an absolute gem, extremely sly and dispassionate, yet a character so full of self-assurance that one almost sides with him. Grace Kelly completes her great year (she gave an Oscar-winning performance in The Country Girl and also starred in Rear Window) by emanating the poised, beautiful being, that is vulnerable, yet oddly unassailable. And itu0026#39;s weird in that even though sheu0026#39;s cheating on her husband, you care for her a lot more than him (although that could do with the fact that heu0026#39;s trying to kill her…) And John Williams, as the police detective, is quite wonderful.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eAlfred Hitchcock manipulates and enthrals his audience here like the master that he is. Each scene has a sense of direction, great pacing, and is staged realistically. Stunning full colour photography and a haunting, atmospheric score from Dimitri Tiomkin complete this great package. The ending, when it comes, feels a little too nice to be truly realistic, but that is my only major quibble with an otherwise highly entertaining, thrilling movie.”

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