翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Blacklist Studio
・ Blacklisted (album)
・ Blacklisted (band)
・ Blacklisted by History
・ Blacklisting
・ Blacklistt
・ Blacklite District
・ Blacklock
・ Blacklock (horse)
・ Blacklock's Reporter
・ Blacklodge
・ Blacklog Creek
・ Blackmagic Design
・ Blackmagic Fusion
・ Blackmail
Blackmail (1929 film)
・ Blackmail (1939 film)
・ Blackmail (1947 film)
・ Blackmail (2005 film)
・ Blackmail (2015 film)
・ Blackmail (album)
・ Blackmail (band)
・ Blackmail (disambiguation)
・ Blackmail (Law & Order)
・ Blackmailed (1951 film)
・ Blackmailers
・ Blackmailers Don't Shoot
・ Blackman
・ Blackman Bay, Tasmania
・ Blackman Charter Township, Michigan


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Blackmail (1929 film) : ウィキペディア英語版
Blackmail (1929 film)

| story =
| based on =
| narrator =
| starring =
| music = Jimmy Campbell and Reg Connelly
Hubert Bath (arrangements)
Billy Mayerl (song: "Miss Up-to-Date")
| cinematography = Jack E. Cox
| editing = Emile de Ruelle
| studio =
| distributor =
| released =
| runtime = 84 minutes
| country = United Kingdom
| language = English
| budget =
| gross =
}}
''Blackmail'' is a 1929 British thriller drama film directed by Alfred Hitchcock and starring Anny Ondra, John Longden, and Cyril Ritchard. Based on the 1928 play ''Blackmail'' by Charles Bennett, the film is about a London woman who is blackmailed after killing a man who tries to rape her.
After starting production as a silent film, British International Pictures decided to convert ''Blackmail'' into a sound film during filming. A silent version was released for theaters not equipped for sound (at 6740 feet), with the sound version (7136 feet) released at the same time.〔(SilentEra entry )〕 The silent version still exists in the British Film Institute collection.〔(BFI Database entry )〕
==Plot==
Scotland Yard Detective Frank Webber (John Longden) escorts his girlfriend Alice White (Anny Ondra) to a tea house. They have an argument and Frank storms out. While reconsidering his action, he sees Alice leave with Mr. Crewe (Cyril Ritchard), an artist she had earlier agreed to meet.
Crewe persuades a reluctant Alice into coming up to see his studio. She admires a painting of a laughing clown, and uses his palette and brushes to paint a cartoonish drawing of a face; he adds a few strokes of a feminine figure, and they both sign the "work". He gives her a dancer's outfit and Crewe sings and plays "Miss Up-to-Date" on the piano.
Crewe steals a kiss, to Alice's disgust, but as she is changing and preparing to leave, he takes her dress from the changing area. He attempts to rape her; her cries for help are not heard on the street below. In desperation, Alice grabs a nearby bread knife and kills him. She angrily punches a hole in the painting of the clown, then leaves after attempting to remove any evidence of her presence in the flat, but forgets to take her gloves. She walks the streets of London all night in a daze.
When the body is found, the killing is assumed to be murder. Frank is assigned to the case and finds one of Alice's gloves. He recognizes both the glove and the dead man, but conceals this from his superior. Taking the glove, he goes to speak with Alice at her father's tobacco shop, but she is still too distraught to speak.
But as they hide from her father in a telephone booth, Tracy (Donald Calthrop), the model for the clown, arrives. He had seen Alice go up to Crewe's flat, and gone in and taken one of the gloves. When he sees Frank with the other one, he attempts to blackmail the couple. His first demands are petty ones and they accede. Then Frank learns by phone that Tracy is wanted for questioning: he was seen near the scene and has a criminal record. Frank sends for policemen and tells Tracy he will pay for the murder.
Alice is apprehensive about Tracy being prosecuted for what she did, but still does not speak up. The tension mounts. When the police arrive, Tracy's nerve finally breaks and he flees. The chase leads to the British Museum, where he clambers onto the domed roof of the Reading Room, but slips, crashes through a skylight, and falls to his death inside. The police assume he was guilty of murder.
Unaware of this, Alice finally feels compelled to give herself up and goes to New Scotland Yard. She writes a confession letter and goes to see the Chief Inspector. Before she can bring herself to confess, the inspector receives a telephone call and asks Frank to deal with Alice. She finally tells him the truth—that it was self-defense against an attack she cannot bear to speak of—and they leave together. As they do, a policeman walks past, carrying the damaged painting of the laughing clown and the canvas where Alice has painted over her name and Crewe's.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Blackmail (1929 film)」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.