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IMDbPro

Candlelight in Algeria

  • 1943
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 26m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
537
YOUR RATING
Candlelight in Algeria (1943)
An American sculptress in wartime Britain gets mixed up with a British agent and a Nazi spy who knows that a top-secret meeting of Allied military leaders will be taking place in Algeria--and that the British agent has a camera that has photographs of the meeting place.
Play trailer1:41
1 Video
8 Photos
DramaMysteryWar

An American sculptress in wartime Algiers gets mixed up with a British agent and a Nazi spy who knows that a top-secret meeting of Allied military leaders will be taking place in Algeria--an... Read allAn American sculptress in wartime Algiers gets mixed up with a British agent and a Nazi spy who knows that a top-secret meeting of Allied military leaders will be taking place in Algeria--and that the British agent has a camera that has photographs of the meeting place.An American sculptress in wartime Algiers gets mixed up with a British agent and a Nazi spy who knows that a top-secret meeting of Allied military leaders will be taking place in Algeria--and that the British agent has a camera that has photographs of the meeting place.

  • Director
    • George King
  • Writers
    • Brock Williams
    • Katherine Strueby
    • Dorothy Hope
  • Stars
    • James Mason
    • Carla Lehmann
    • Raymond Lovell
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.2/10
    537
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • George King
    • Writers
      • Brock Williams
      • Katherine Strueby
      • Dorothy Hope
    • Stars
      • James Mason
      • Carla Lehmann
      • Raymond Lovell
    • 17User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:41
    Official Trailer

    Photos7

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    Top cast28

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    James Mason
    James Mason
    • Alan Thurston
    Carla Lehmann
    Carla Lehmann
    • Susan Foster
    Raymond Lovell
    • Von Alven
    Enid Stamp-Taylor
    Enid Stamp-Taylor
    • Maritza
    • (as Enid Stamp Taylor)
    Walter Rilla
    Walter Rilla
    • Dr. Muller
    Pamela Stirling
    • Yvette
    Lea Seidl
    • Sister
    Sybille Binder
    Sybille Binder
    • Woman
    • (as Sybilla Binder)
    Hella Kürty
    Hella Kürty
    • Maid
    • (as Hella Kurty)
    Paul Bonifas
    Paul Bonifas
    • French Proprietor
    Leslie Bradley
    Leslie Bradley
    • Henri de Lange
    Harold Berens
    • Toni
    Cot D'Ordan
    • Hotel Manager
    Richard George
    Richard George
    • Capt. Matthews
    Meinhart Maur
    • Schultz
    Jacques Metadier
    • Elderly French Officer
    Michael Morel
    • Police Commissioner
    • (as Michel Morel)
    Bart Norman
    • Gen. Mark Clark
    • Director
      • George King
    • Writers
      • Brock Williams
      • Katherine Strueby
      • Dorothy Hope
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews17

    6.2537
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    Featured reviews

    9annalbin-1

    Fez up - it's a fun film

    You can get this film from Movies Unlimited. However, it is not 85 minutes long as advertised in IMDb and other places. It's about 63 minutes long, but the story seems complete enough. The interplay between the American heroine and her English secret agent boy friend is snappy and sassy. If you have ever wondered why James Mason was once considered the "Cambridge edition of Clark Gable", then look no further than this film. I particularly like the scenes where he is running around with a fez on his head for no apparently good reason. This was one of three films Mason did where he played the "good" guy (before the Brits figured out he'd be much more of a box office hit playing slightly sadistic anti-heroes). The other two are "Hotel Reserve" and "Secret Mission".
    6howardmorley

    Oh How I I Long For Foreign Language Sub-Titles in these War Films

    I rated this film 6/10 having discovered it in a rare film emporium in Camden Market, North London, last Sunday.I am a forties film aficionado but had never seen this title before.One thing British/American films constantly do in war films is to assume all German/French characters speak fluent English (to make it easy on audiences who will mostly only speak this language), and this film was no exception, (although marginally less so than most US 40s films of the time).What is especially laughable is when German characters speak in English to other German characters!On the other hand, this 1944 film did not take itself too seriously especially the end scene, when Carla Lehmann describes to James Mason how Hollywood would have filmed the self same scene, (all done to keep up the nation's morale!).A more enlightened treatment of showing various European languages on film is for producers to hire actors German/French who can speak in their own native tongue but then show English sub-titles for that part of the plot as in Darryl F Zanuck's ground breaking epic, "The Longest Day" (1962).

    The two US reviewers above seemed to have enjoyed this film, so I suppose it served its purpose however I could not award it more than just above an adequate rating.
    GManfred

    Pepe Le Moko Meets Dorothy

    British spy Alan Thurston (Mason) is trying to get hold of a camera to bring to the British Consulate in Algiers. It has pictures of the location of a top-secret meeting place of the Allied commanders regarding the invasion of North Africa. Tailing him is RNO (repugnant Nazi official) Dr. Muller, who knows of the camera. Thurston breaks into the Algerian residence of American civilian Susan Foster (Carla Lehmann), with Muller in hot pursuit. Thurston persuades her to help him in his quest for the camera, since he is too notorious and would be arrested on sight in Algiers. There then follows a tense and taut cat-and-mouse game with Nazi officials and our two co-heroes.

    The picture is extremely well-done and the suspense doesn't let up for the entire 82 minutes (by my watch). There is a romantic interlude in The Casbah, where Thurston has sought refuge and has taken Ms. Foster, reminiscent of 'Pepe Le Moko", in which similar circumstances occur. Ms. Foster, it turns out, is from Kansas, fulfilling the prophesy of my headline. Walter Rilla plays Dr. Muller in despicable fashion, a Nazi civilian official feared by everyone in the picture except Thurston.

    Despite the grim circumstances the mood of the picture ranges from deadly serious to lighthearted, especially during exchanges between Mason and Lehmann (the deadly serious passages belong to Rilla). I agree with a reviewer above that Mason was a dashing adventure hero - too bad he became typecast as humorless and overbearing. I don't understand why this movie is so lightly regarded and why it hasn't been shown on TV or in revival houses. Note to IMDb directors: Your rating is too low. It is better than a similar movie, "Five Graves To Cairo", made the previous year. You should at least use the median figure instead of the weighted one.
    6Coffee_in_the_Clink

    Intelligent propaganda piece, better than expected

    "Candlelight in Algeria" still burns strong today. Considering that this was released in 1944, one would be forgiven for thinking that this would be a rather cringe-inducing jingoistic piece of propaganda. Propaganda it may be, but I would call it classy propaganda. It's intelligent for starters as the Germans are portrayed well and are not stereotypical monsters or evil caricatures. That is something I really applaud this film for, it's as if the filmmakers intended on making a film that could age as well as any other from this era and still be praised decades later, but still is respectful of what the cinema-going public wanted to see at that time. So as a propaganda film it is strong in how it portrays the background to the Allied invasion of North Africa in Operation Torch in 1942 - the beginning of American involvement in the war against Nazi Germany - and the celebration of that subsequent victory with the Allies marching into Tunis.

    It's worth knowing a little bit of WW2 history to understand what's going on here. The film centres around a woman telling the story of her involvement in a major covert operation in ensuring the secrecy of Operation Torch. Carla Lehmann is excellent in the lead. At the very least it is worth knowing a bit about Vichy France (the French-Nazi puppet government that encapsulated the southern part of France following German occupation in 1940) and its involvement in North Africa.

    Interesting note, and something I spotted straight away in the opening credits, Hammer legend Terence Fisher (director of "The Curse of Frankenstein" and "Dracula") was part of the editing team.
    6boblipton

    James Mason Romances Carla Lehmann & Helps Win The War

    Carla Lehmann wakes in a hospital in North Africa, where she tells a nursing sister of how she met British spy James Mason, stole a camera in Algiers for him and outwitted various nasty Nazis to save the landings at Oran in North Africa.

    It's a good, breezy movie directed by George King, who just half a decade earlier had been directed melodramas starring Tod Browning. Now he was telling James Mason, one of Britain's biggest home-grown stars of the period what to do. Mason, however, is not the subject of the movie, and is present for about half of it. Instead, Canadian-born Miss Lehmann carries the show as a quick-witted sculptress from Kansas. She's pretty good, even though the net effect of this movie is a hands-across-the-seas programmer from, say, Universal. The plot borrows liberally from other movies. There's an extensive Casbah segment that suggests PEPE LE MOKO, and a local girl hopelessly in love with Mason, played charmingly by Pamela Stirling; Walter Rilla plays the baddie, even though there isn't much menace in performance; and the Americans are represented, not only by Miss Lehmann, but Bart Norman playing General Mark Clark!

    Mason didn't think much of the movie. He later noted that after the war, it was a hit in Bulgaria. Perhaps it's because he wore a mustache for the first half of it.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      A severely shortened DVD and VHS videotape version, running only about 65 minutes, is presently being circulated among underground film dealers in both USA and Canada, who either ignore complaints from buyers, or else claim it's the USA release version. The USA release, as distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox in 1944, is the same length as the British version, 86 minutes.
    • Goofs
      When Susan Foster is about to hide Alan Thurston in a cupboard, a shadow appears briefly on an adjoining wall. Since from their positions it would not appear to be that of either of them, it could only be that of a crew member.
    • Quotes

      Alan Thurston: Now we both go to earth. Feel like a climb? Know where you are?

      Susan Foster: The Casbah.

      Alan Thurston: That's it. The haunt of vice, the lair of criminals, the hideout of every thief and murderer in Algiers. I've lived here as safely as if I were in London.

    • Crazy credits
      Opening credits prologue: Our story takes place in Algeria during the uneasy period before the Allied Invasion of North Africa. Algiers - the headquarters of the German Armistice Commission - was under the control of the Vichy Government. Britain was fighting for her empire in the sands of Libya, and America, still friendly with Vichy, was preparing her first land campaign of the war in the west. It is a story - not of war but of adventure - of a secret meeting which paved the way for a great Allied victory.

      VICTORY TUNISIA 1943
    • Soundtracks
      It's Love
      Written by Muriel Watson and Jack Denby

      French lyrics by G. Arbib

      Sung by Christiane De Maurin

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    FAQ13

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 30, 1944 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
      • German
    • Also known as
      • Signal iz Alžira
    • Production company
      • British Aviation Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 26 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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