Soviet, British, French and American allies patrol post-war Vienna.Soviet, British, French and American allies patrol post-war Vienna.Soviet, British, French and American allies patrol post-war Vienna.
- Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
- 1 win & 2 nominations total
Yossi Yadin
- Sgt. Vassilij Voroshenko
- (as Yoseph Yadin)
Albert Dinan
- Sgt. Marcel Pasture
- (as Dinan)
Gregori Chmara
- Russian kommissar
- (uncredited)
Geraldine Katt
- Steffi - Harry's girlfriend
- (uncredited)
François Simon
- French policeman
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaSoviet authorities, who felt insulted by the way the USSR is depicted in the story, protested against the release of the film in April 1951.
- Alternate versionsThe French-language sequences in the film, largely involving scenes in the Pasture household during Fraziska's stay, were edited out of the American release prints, leaving only the principal English-language material.
Featured review
Viveca Lindfors was a prominent Swedish actress who rose to fame in the shadow of Ingrid Bergman, but she is actually more beautiful and more interesting. She made films in Italy before Bergman, and she chose her roles and films with great distinction - although she acted against Errol Flynn in one film, she never accepted standard stardom roles - she needed roles to suit her depth. This is a Swiss film about the post war time in Vienna, when the city was divided by the four occupation forces, Russia, France, England and America, each ruling their own sector except the centre, which was divided equally among them, but patrolling the city regularly by four representatives of the four forces in a jeep - and the film is about them and how they dealt with a problem. An Austrian prisoner of war escapes from a prison camp in Hungary and is wanted by the Russians. His wife is waiting for him at home in Vienna in the Russian sector, and since the Russians are after him they lock her out of her flat to occupy it themselves, lying in wait for the escapee. The other three in the jeep wish to help her, particularly the American Ralph Meeker, and she is allowed to stay temporarily with the family of the French officer. Some of the best scenes are interiors from their home, but the film is rich in memorable scenes. The greatest is when a train arrives with released prisoners of war and the station is filled with their relatives expecting them, the police tries to keep the crowd back, but at length it is impossible, and this is a scene no one will be likely to ever forget. The circumstances here are identical with those of "The Third Man", but there is no villainy here, no political intrigue, no refugee tragedy, this is no thriller, but everything is poignantly realistic, all the four nations speaking their own language. It's a gripping story, although no masterpiece, but it is very Carol Reed-like, especially when you also think of "The Man Between" of a similar situation in Berlin. But the major difference between this and Carol Reed's two films is the permanence of Viveca Lindfors - this could be one of her most interesting roles, while they are all interesting.
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Languages
- Also known as
- Štirje v džipu
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- CHF 2,000,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 20 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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