|
The Lady Vanishes (1938, UK)
In Alfred Hitchcock's early, pre-War classic mystery-thriller
- it was his last British film before the director moved to Hollywood,
and based upon Ethel Lina White's 1936 novel "The Wheel Spins":
- in the opening sequence, due to a snow avalanche,
the small Gasthof Petrus village inn in the central European country
of Bandrika was besieged and overcrowded by stranded travelers
from the train, including English tourist and spoiled, engaged
socialite heiress-playgirl Iris Matilda Henderson (Margaret Lockwood);
she was enroute back to Britain to be married to an aristocrat
named Charles; she was soon to meet folk-song, ethno-musicologist
Gilbert Redman (Michael Redgrave) in the room above, who kept Iris
awake by re-enacting a noisy Balkan wedding dance
- in a startling scene outside the inn, a harmless
serenader with a guitar (Roy Russell), who was performing a haunting
melody, was abruptly strangled (a pair of silhouetted hands from
an unseen killer signaled his death); one of the hotel guests -
the elderly, eccentric ex-governess, spinster, and music teacher
Miss Froy (Dame May Whitty) strained to listen to him due to the
noisy folk-dancers
- the following morning with the tracks cleared, and
as the train was about to depart, Iris was hit on the head with
a planter box dropped from above; she began to suffer dizziness
and hallucinations; she didn't know that the intended target was
actually Miss Froy who was next to her; Iris regained consciousness
in a compartment where Miss Froy and other non-English-speaking
passengers were seated
- during the train ride, Iris shared a cup of tea with
the kindly Miss Froy in the dining car (Miss Froy used her own preferred
tea bag); because of a loud train whistle and track noise making it difficult to hear,
she had written her name with her finger on the frosted glass of
the window: ("FROY - it rhymes with Joy!")
- once back in the compartment, Iris fell deeply asleep
with Miss Froy sitting across from her - but then the old lady had
suddenly and mysteriously disappeared when she awoke - and no one
seemed to remember her: ("There has been no English lady here") - was there a cover-up, or where
there other reasons for denying her presence?; after her disappearance,
a frantic search commenced to locate her, with Iris assisted by Gilbert;
Iris' search was described thusly: "She's
back there kicking up a devil of a fuss that she's lost her friend";
brain surgeon Dr. Egon Hartz (Paul Lukas) excused Iris' account of
the absent Miss Froy by blaming it on delusionary hallucinations following her head-concussion
- one of the clues Miss Froy had left behind was her
handwriting on the train window; shortly later, a second clue was
discovered - the momentary sight of a Harriman's Herbal Tea packet-bag
(Miss Froy's own personal favorite tea brand) stuck to the train
window pane after the garbage was tossed through a window by the
train's cook; even later, Miss Froy's broken glasses were found in the baggage car
- at the train's first stop (where no one exited), an
eerie-looking, fully-bandaged or mummified brain surgery "patient" -
allegedly Dr. Hartz's patient, was brought on-board on a stretcher;
the patient was accompanied by Dr. Hartz's
suspicious, working-class, mute British nurse-nun attendant (Catherine
Lacey); afterwards, a Miss Froy look-alike, named Madame Kummer (Josephine
Wilson), mysteriously appeared on the train, and claimed to have
accompanied Iris after her head concussion; it was thought that Miss
Froy ("The
Lady")
had Vanished
- Iris became suspicious when she noticed that Dr. Hartz'
attendant was wearing high heeled shoes -
was she one of the foreign agent conspirators who was involved in
Miss Froy's abduction?; Iris suspected a conspiracy and worried that
the bandaged patient (Madame Kummar), who had gained
entry into the train in disguise, might be switched with Miss Froy,
in order to have them swap places; Miss Froy would be kidnapped (and
removed from the train in bandages), and then taken
to a hospital and murdered during an alleged operation
- after drugging Iris and Gilbert with doctored drinks,
Dr. Hartz admitted to them that he was involved in the conspiracy
to remove Miss Froy from the train, disguised as his patient:
"l am in this conspiracy as you term it. You are a very alert
young couple, but it's quite useless for you to think of a way out
of your dilemma. The drink you've had now, l regret to say, contained
a quantity of Hydrocin. For your benefit, Hydrocin is a very little
known drug which has the effect in a small quantity of paralyzing the
brain and rendering the victim unconscious for a considerable period";
however, Hartz didn't know that the Nurse (a British woman who felt
loyalty to England) didn't comply with his request to drug them, and
they faked the drug's effect
Revelations
|
Bandaged "Patient" - The Kidnapped Miss
Froy?
|
|
|
Dr. Hartz' Nurse-Nun Attendant Wearing High-Heeled
Shoes
|
Conspirator Dr. Hartz (Paul Lukas)
|
Unwrapping Miss Froy's Bandages
|
Miss Froy's Confession - About Being a Spy
|
- Iris and Gilbert located the bandaged Miss
Froy (who was being prepared to be removed from the train at the
next stop), unwrapped her bandages, and replaced
her with Madame Kummer - against her will; at the next train stop,
Dr. Hartz and his "patient" (Madame Kummer) departed
from the train to enter an ambulance, but once Dr. Hartz
realized that Miss Froy had been freed and swapped with Madame
Kummer, he ordered the train to be diverted onto a branch line
and stopped
- there was a resulting gunfight shootout with uniformed military soldiers from
the Morsken station who boarded the train; during
the chaos, Miss Froy admitted to Iris and Gilbert that she was
a British spy, and that her secret mission was to deliver a musical
coded message; she explained that she would share her encoded message
with them, just in case: "In case I'm unlucky and you get through,
I want you to take back a message
for a Mr. Callendar at the Foreign Office at Whitehall....It's a
tune. It contains, in code of course, the vital clause of a secret
pact between two European countries. I want you to memorize it" -
[Note: Miss Froy was a British spy in disguise, who had memorized
the film's MacGuffin (a musically-coded state secret hidden in folk
music). It was the same tune that was performed by the assassinated
guitarist at the inn.]; Gilbert boasted that he could easily memorize
the tune; after transferring the code to them, Miss Froy fled from
the train into a nearby forest
- by the film's conclusion set back in London, Iris
and Gilbert had apparently fallen in love; the two took a taxi-cab
to the Foreign Office in London, and were taken to a waiting
room where Gilbert sheepishly admitted that he had forgotten
the memorized tune of the all-important folk tune
- in the very last frames of the film, the couple heard the tune being
played in an adjoining room, and were joyfully reunited with Miss Froy;
she was seen seated at a piano playing the cryptic melody
(containing the coded secret message)
|
Strangulation of Harmless Guitarist Serenader (Roy Russell)
Outside the Inn
Iris Henderson Hit on Head by Planter Box and Suffering
Dizziness
First Clue: Miss Froy Had Written Her Name on Train
Window in Dining Car with Iris
Second Clue: Miss Froy's Herbal Tea Bag Stuck to
Train Window
Ending: Iris and Gilbert Back in London - and in
Love
Reunited with Miss Froy, Seated at Piano Playing the Tune
in the Foreign Office in London
|