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DramaWar

Paris After Dark

- THEY CAN CHANGE YOU INTO SOMETHING YOU HATE

Andre Marbel is the upper-class doctor who is able to continue his practice above suspicion even though he is a leader in the French Resistance. His nurse supports his activities, but her Nazi-brainwashed husband provides the tension.

Release Date : 1943-10-15

Language :English

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : 20th Century Fox

Production Country : United States of America

Alternative Titles :

Cast

George Sanders

Character Name : Dr. Andre Marbel

Original Name : George Sanders

Gender : Male

Philip Dorn

Character Name : Jean Blanchard

Original Name : Philip Dorn

Gender : Male

Brenda Marshall

Character Name : Yvonne Blanchard

Original Name : Brenda Marshall

Gender : Female

Madeleine Lebeau

Character Name : Collette

Original Name : Madeleine Lebeau

Gender : Female

Marcel Dalio

Character Name : Michel

Original Name : Marcel Dalio

Gender : Male

Robert Lewis

Character Name : Col. Pirosh

Original Name : Robert Lewis

Gender : Male

Henry Rowland

Character Name : Capt. Franch

Original Name : Henry Rowland

Gender : Male

Raymond Roe

Character Name : George Benoit

Original Name : Raymond Roe

Gender : Male

Gene Gary

Character Name : Victor Durand

Original Name : Gene Gary

Gender : Male

Jean Del Val

Character Name : Lucien Benoit

Original Name : Jean Del Val

Gender : Male

Curt Bois

Character Name : Max

Original Name : Curt Bois

Gender : Male

Ann Codee

Character Name : Madame Benoit

Original Name : Ann Codee

Gender : Female

Reviews

C

CinemaSerf

@Geronimo1967

2023-12-03

Set amidst the Nazi occupation of Paris, this film follows the perilous lives of those trying to balance their routine "public" lives with organising the resistance. Leading their efforts is "Dr. Marbel" (George Sanders) who manages to stay on decent enough terms with the brutish "Col. Pirosh" (Robert Lewis) by helping treat his soldiers. Not everyone knows of his more patriotic role, though, and he frequently earns the enmity of his compatriots. "Blanchard" (Philip Dorn), meantime, has just returned from a period of incarceration and is pretty shell-shocked, his spirit broken and his nerves on edge. He tries to encourage a policy of co-operation - to stay alive. This causes ructions with the hot-headed "Georges" (Raymond Roe) whose tragic murder galvanises the locals just as the Allies land in Algiers. It's a bit wordy this, but Léonide Moguy does create a sense of the constant state of fear in which the population lived at the hands of their malevolent new masters. It's not a particularly notable effort from Sanders, but Dorn and firebrand Roe contrast well as people have to make almost impossible choices to keep themselves, and their families, from a potential firing squad. It's not really got an ending, more a work in progress and though perfectly watchable, isn't really very memorable.