The Spy in Black is a 1939 British espionage thriller directed by Michael Powell, with a screenplay by Emeric Pressburger (their first collaboration). Produced by Alexander Korda’s London Films, it was released in the UK in August 1939, just weeks before the outbreak of World War II. The film runs about 82 minutes and is notable for its suspenseful plotting, atmospheric cinematography, and its role in launching the legendary Powell–Pressburger partnership.
Plot Summary
Set during World War I, the story follows Captain Hardt (Conrad Veidt), a German U‑boat commander sent on a secret mission to the Orkney Islands in Scotland. His task is to rendezvous with a German spy posing as a local schoolteacher, Anne Burnett (Valerie Hobson), who is working with traitorous British officer Lieutenant Ashington (Sebastian Shaw).
Hardt’s mission is to obtain intelligence on the British fleet anchored at Scapa Flow, enabling a devastating German attack. However, deception and double‑crosses abound: loyalties are tested, identities concealed, and the line between duty and betrayal blurs. The climax delivers a tense confrontation that underscores the moral ambiguities of espionage.
Cast
- Conrad Veidt as Captain Hardt
- Valerie Hobson as Anne Burnett
- Sebastian Shaw as Lieutenant Ashington
- Athene Seyler as Miss McNaughton
- Edward Chapman as Reverend Hector Matthews
Production Notes & Trivia
- Directed by Michael Powell, with script by Emeric Pressburger—their first collaboration, preceding their famous Archers productions (The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp, A Matter of Life and Death).
- Produced by Alexander Korda, a key figure in British cinema’s international rise.
- Filmed on location in the Orkney Islands, adding authenticity to its wartime setting.
- Released just before WWII began, giving it uncanny topical relevance.
- Conrad Veidt, a German émigré actor who fled the Nazis, plays the German U‑boat captain with nuance, avoiding caricature.
- The film’s suspenseful tone and moral complexity foreshadow Powell & Pressburger’s later masterpieces.
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