Notorious

ThrillerRomanceMystery
Overview : In order to help bring Nazis to justice, U.S. government agent T.R. Devlin recruits Alicia Huberman, the American daughter of a convicted German war criminal, as a spy. As they begin to fall for one another, Alicia is instructed to win the affections of Alexander Sebastian, a Nazi hiding out in Brazil. When Sebastian becomes serious about his relationship with Alicia, the stakes get higher, and Devlin must watch her slip further undercover.
Budget : 2000000USD
language : en
Runtime : 103 min
Release Date : 1946-08-21
Imdb ID : tt0038787
Status : Released

Cast

Cary Grant
T.R. Devlin

Ingrid Bergman
Alicia Huberman

Claude Rains
Alexander Sebastian

Leopoldine Konstantin
Madame Anna Sebastian

Louis Calhern
Captain Paul Prescott

Alex Minotis
Joseph

Reinhold Schünzel
Dr. Anderson

Ivan Triesault
Eric Mathis

Eberhard Krumschmidt
Emil Hupka

Moroni Olsen
Walter Beardsley

Ricardo Costa
Dr. Julio Barbosa

Charles Mendl
Commodore

Wally Brown
Mr. Hopkins

Fay Baker
Ethel

Friedrich von Ledebur
Knerr (uncredited)

Peter von Zerneck
Wilhelm Rossner (uncredited)

Fred Nurney
John Huberman (uncredited)

Charles D. Brown
Judge (uncredited)

Eddie Bruce
Reporter (uncredited)

Ben Erway
Reporter (uncredited)

Donald Kerr
Reporter (uncredited)

James Logan
Reporter (uncredited)

Emmett Vogan
Reporter (uncredited)

John Vosper
Reporter (uncredited)

Alan Ward
Reporter (uncredited)

Paul Bryar
Photographer (uncredited)

George Lynn
Photographer (uncredited)

Frank Marlowe
Photographer (uncredited)

Howard Negley
Photographer (uncredited)

Virginia Gregg
File Clerk (uncredited)

Bea Benaderet
File Clerk (uncredited)

Aileen Carlyle
Woman at Party (uncredited)

Elizabeth Wilson
Woman at Party (uncredited)

Almeda Fowler
Woman (uncredited)

Leota Lorraine
Woman (uncredited)

Sandra Morgan
Woman (uncredited)

Lillian West
Woman (uncredited)

Richard Clarke
Man (uncredited)

Francis McDonald
Man (uncredited)

Alfred Hitchcock
Man Drinking Champagne at Party (uncredited)

Frank McLure
Man Walking Through Door Leaving Courtroom (uncredited)

Tom Coleman
Court Stenographer (uncredited)

Alfredo DeSa
Ribero (uncredited)

Bess Flowers
Party Guest (uncredited)

Art Howard
Party Guest (uncredited)

Jeffrey Sayre
Party Guest (uncredited)

Bert Moorhouse
Diner Extra / Party Guest (uncredited)

Gavin Gordon
Ernest Weylin (uncredited)

Harry Hayden
Defense Counsel (uncredited)

Warren Jackson
District Attorney (uncredited)

Thomas Martin
Butler (uncredited)

Tina Menard
Maid (uncredited)

Howard M. Mitchell
Bailiff (uncredited)

Antonio Moreno
Senor Ortiza (uncredited)

Garry Owen
Motorcycle Policeman (uncredited)

Dink Trout
Court Clerk (uncredited)

Lenore Ulric
Horsewoman with Sebastian (uncredited)

Frank Wilcox
FBI Agent (uncredited)

Bernice Barrett
File Clerk (uncredited)

Lulu Mae Bohrman
Party Guest (uncredited)

Candido Bonsato
Waiter (uncredited)

Beulah Christian
Woman (uncredited)

William Gordon
Adams (uncredited)

Ted Kelly
Waiter (uncredited)

Ramon Nomar
Dr. Silva (uncredited)

Louis Serrano
Brazilian Official (uncredited)

Patricia Smart
Mrs. Jackson (uncredited)

Herbert Wyndham
Mr. Cook (uncredited)

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Reviews

tanty
Good thriller from Alfred Hitschcock.
Geronimo1967
Ingrid Bergman and Cary Grant just ooze charisma in this classic Hitchcock story of espionage and romance. She ("Alicia") has taken to the bottle following the conviction of her Nazi father and is heading down the slippery slope when she is approached by "Devlin" (Grant) who offers her a chance to redeem herself. She is to ingratiate herself with a group of her father's cohorts in Rio and feed back her intelligence to the CIA. Once in Rio, she is reunited with her arch-Nazi admirer "Alexander" (Claude Rains) and, at the insistence of her new boss (Louis Calhern) she marries him. What now ensues is a cleverly developing tale of treachery and betrayal tempered with plenty of humour and a little romance (of course she and "Devlin" fall for each other). The photography is both grand and intimate, Roy Webb has scored this perfectly and Hitchcock uses Ben Hecht's story to full effect. This is a classic piece of cinema that I saw quite recently on a big screen - and it is well worth watching again!