The House on Telegraph Hill (1951)

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The House on Telegraph Hill: Directed by Robert Wise. With Richard Basehart, Valentina Cortese, William Lundigan, Fay Baker. Concentration camp survivor Victoria Kowelska finds herself involved in mystery, greed, and murder after she assumes the identity of a dead friend in order to gain passage to America.

“Valentina Cortese and Richard Baseheart make this film together with a superb script an ace of films. Only the introduction to the story is gripping enough, the familiar situation of displaced persons in refugee camps after the war, here two ladies, one dying, the other desperate enough to do anything to take a chance. Valentina takes a chance and gets from the frying-pan into the fire, but in a completely different world – from the atrocious misery of concentration camps to webs of intrigue in the riches and luxuries of high society in California.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eRobert Wise was always one of the most reliable of directors, while he never repeated himself – itu0026#39;s astounding how different the character of every one of his films is from all the others. Here we find ourselves in a thriller like in u0026quot;The Spiral Staircaseu0026quot; but with more interesting human relationships, as you walk in blindness among the manoeuvring characters as much as Valentina does, and you can only suspect the worst of almost every one of them – except the real perpetrator. Only in the last scene the real drama is revealed, and the only one who understood it all from the beginning was the dead woman in the portrait, who triumphs.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eItu0026#39;s a film of outstanding eloquence both in intrigue, dialogue, cinematography and above all direction. Even the music couldnu0026#39;t be better.”

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