
“MOST THRILLING PICTURE SINCE "HOUSE ON 92ND STREET"!”
An FBI agent works with a refugee scientist and the Coast Guard to crack a Soviet spy ring in Boston.
Release Date: 6/1/1952
Runtime: 98 minutes
Languages: English, Russian, Spanish
Director: Alfred L. Werker
00Companies: RD-DR Productions, Columbia Pictures
Countries: United States of America
CinemaSerf
Were it not for the oppressive and seriously condescending narrative this might have been quite a decent little fifth-columnist drama. Karel Stepanek is "Laschenko", the communist mastermind behind a plot to force renowned scientist "Prof. Kafer" (a very unlikely Finlay Currie) to reveal some top secret data about a project he is working on. The remainder of the plot is presented almost like a Q and A. The characters pose the questions and the infallible GI men have all the answers, they have all the state of the art kit (some on which looked like it had been drawn at kindergarten) and they also appear to have more manpower than the entire population of Boston, where this is based. Sadly, there is not the slightest jeopardy with this FBI propaganda piece - they even refer to John Edgar Hoover at the end, is if to humanise the man. Stepanek was also reliable as the baddie but the rest of the cast - and the film - are entirely forgettable.
Millie / Teresa Zalenko

George Murphy
Inspector James 'Jim' Belden

Finlay Currie
Professor Albert Kafer

Virginia Gilmore
Millie / Teresa Zalenko

Karl Stepanek
Alexi Laschenkov / Gregory Anders

Louisa Horton
Mrs. Elaine Wilben

Peter Capell
Chris Zalenko / Gino
Bruno Wick
Luther Danzig
Vilma Kurer
Mrs. Rita Foss
Ann Thomas
Philadelphia Suspect

George Roy Hill
Nicholas Wilben
Karl Weber
FBI Agent Charlie Reynolds
Michael Garrett
Michael Dorndoff aka Frank Torrance
1999