The B-Hive
By Ed Garea
By Ed Garea
They
Came to Blow Up America (20th Century
Fox, 1943) –
Director: Edward Ludwig. Writers: Michael Jacoby (story), Aubrey
Wisberg (s/p). Cast: George Sanders, Anna Sten, Ward Bond, Dennis
Hoey, Sig Ruman, Ludwig Stossel, Elsa Janssen, Robert Barrat, Poldi
Dur, Ralph Byrd, Charles McGraw, & Fred Nurney. B&W, 73
minutes.
There
are times when a plot lands on the studio’s lap.
Such
is the case with this movie from Fox in 1943. Like the Warner
Brothers films of the ‘30s that claimed to be “ripped from the
headlines,” They Came to Blow Up America was
based on recent events. (Not so coincidentally, Darryl Zanuck, head
of Fox, was also head of production for Warner Bros. in the early
‘30s when their “ripped from the headlines” films came out.)
In
this case, it was the landing of Nazi saboteurs in America, part of
“Operation Pastorius,” a plot hatched by the Abwehr (German
Army Intelligence) and directed against strategic American economic
targets. The first agents, led by Georg Dasch, landed on Long Island
on the night of June 12, 1942. Immediately after landing, everything
went wrong. A Coast Guard patrolman came upon the group and began
asking questions. Dasch grabbed him, threatened him, and shoved $260
into his hand. The Guardsman left, but reported everything once back
at base. A second group landed later that month in Florida. The two
groups were supposed to link up on July 4 in Cincinnati to coordinate
their operations, but never came close. Dasch had misgivings about
the thing and along with his second-in-command, Ernst Burger, decided
to inform the FBI. After that, it was easy for J. Edgar Hoover and
his agents to quickly round up the group. Brought to trial, the
saboteurs were given the death penalty, but President Franklin D.
Roosevelt, in recognition of their testimony, commuted Burger’s
sentence to life in prison and Dasch’s to 30 years. In 1948,
President Harry S. Truman granted the pair executive clemency and
deported them back to Germany.
Sounds
like a great idea for a movie, right? Well, Fox certainly thought so
and set both Jacoby and Wisberg to work molding it into a film. The
first thing the writers did was to provide a twist. Instead of the
chief saboteur, now renamed Carl Steelman, being a German national
who lived in the U.S., he now became an American born to naturalized
parents. Sanders, then under contract to Fox, was brought in to play
Steelman. Sanders had made a name for himself playing villains of
various sorts, including Nazis. Even when he played a good guy, he
generally portrayed characters about whom we weren’t that sure,
such as the Saint and the Falcon.
The
film is told in flashback. A junior agent quizzes FBI Chief Craig
(Bond) as to why only six of the eight saboteurs were given the death
penalty. Bond retrieves Steelman’s file and fills the agent in on
the whole story. Steelman was in reality an FBI agent, who had been a
mining engineer and explosives expert in South America before joining
the Bureau. He’s sent to his hometown of Milwaukee to infiltrate
the local German-American Bund. It is at such a meeting that he meets
Ernst Reiter (Nurney), who divulges that he’s been called back to
the Fatherland to be trained as a saboteur. Reiter dies in a police
raid. The FBI keeps Reiter’s death a secret, allowing Steelman to
become Reiter and attend the spy school in Reiter’s place.
To
effectively pull off the ruse, Steelman must pretend to be a rabid
Nazi even to his parents (Stossel and Janssen), who are predictably
outraged. Steelman travels to Hamburg, Germany, posing as Reiter, and
begins his studies. While in Hamburg he becomes enamored of a young
woman named Helga Lorenz (Dur). Shortly after meeting her, Steelman
is summoned to Gestapo headquarters by Colonel Taeger (Hoey) and
informed that Lorenz is suspected of being a traitor. Taeger then
orders him to continue seeing Lorenz to gather evidence against her.
Visiting her at her apartment, he accidentally find anti-Nazi
leaflets and warns her, but also notices they are being spied upon,
so he denounces her to Taeger, who has her arrested and shipped to a
concentration camp. However, Steelman intercepts the car taking her
away and rescues her.
A
stickier situation arises when Steelman is informed that Mrs. Reiter
(Sten) wishes to see her husband. He has no choice but to tell her in
private that her husband was captured in America and to give him a
day to explain himself. Knowing that she will go immediately to the
Gestapo, he beats her there and denounces her to Taeger as mentally
incompetent. Taeger buys what Steelman is selling and has her thrown
into a mental asylum.
Meanwhile,
back in America, Pops Steelman has become ill, possibly depressed
over his son’s “conversion” to Nazism. Craig comes to visit and
tells Pops the truth to put his mind at ease. However, he stresses
over and over before leaving that this is top secret and cannot be
divulged –
not
even to Ma Steelman. So what does Pops Steelman do? He immediately
tells the family’s doctor, Herman Holger (Ruman). We in the
audience know that one does not tell Sig Ruman anything,
for he’s one of the naughtiest Nazis on the planet. Dr. Holger
immediately informs Germany, though not before Steelman has graduated
with honors and is already at sea with his crew.
Taeger
gets the message from Dr. Holger and cannot believe his eyes. He goes
to see Frau Reiter at the asylum, shows her a photo of Steelman, and
asks if that is her husband. He answers with an emphatic “nein,”
and threatens to sink Taeger once she gets out. Taeger, seeing his
future in Dachau, tells the asylum’s warder to shoot her, for
didn’t the Fuehrer order all metal defectives to be killed? Exit
Frau Reiter. Taeger then wires the submarine to inform them to turn
back. Unfortunately, Steelman and his crew have already left on
rubber rafts for the shore and the sub itself is blown apart by a
explosive device Steelman has conveniently left behind.
Once
ashore, the saboteurs are quickly captured. Craig makes Steelman keep
his disguise and testify against the other men, as well as the four
other saboteurs sent to Florida. Once back in Milwaukee, Steelman
looks up Dr. Holger and informs him that he has a list of German
agents in America. He further informs the Doctor that he is at number
eight on the list as he arrests Holger for espionage. The film ends
with Craig explaining to the inquiring agent that Steelman is already
on another undercover assignment.
The
first thing we notice after the film ends is that for an action film,
it has little action. We also notice that Sanders is badly miscast as
the hero –
an
action figure and overall sensitive guy –
a role that does not play to his acting strengths. Sten, whose career
was long past the time when Samuel Goldwyn was billing her as the new
Garbo (amazing what happens when your first three movies bomb badly),
is quite effective playing the outraged Frau Reiter. She makes the
most of her small role, conveying the fine line between confusion and
outrage, with her German accent perfect.
The
most puzzling bit of casting was having Cockney Dennis Hoey playing
Gestapo Colonel Taeger. Hoey gives it his best, but it just doesn’t
come off, being more comic than anything else. Dur, as the threatened
Helga, is as flat as last night’s beer, doing nothing else except
taking her cues from Sanders. The film may be ripped from yesterday’s
headlines, but it is nothing more than layer upon layer of cliché.
Note Steelman’s parents. Stossel is essentially playing the same
sort of character he played in Universal’s Frankenstein series as
the angry, confused villager. They may have come to blow up America,
but we’d have been better off if they just blew up the plot
instead.
Not the best George Sanders film.
ReplyDeleteTo say the least, but he's definitely entertaining in this movie.
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