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Escape (1940 film)

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Escape
Lobby card
Directed byMervyn LeRoy
Screenplay byArch Oboler
Marguerite Roberts
Based onEscape
1939 novel
by Ethel Vance
Produced byMervyn LeRoy
Lawrence Weingarten (uncredited)
StarringNorma Shearer
Robert Taylor
Conrad Veidt
Nazimova
Felix Bressart
Albert Bassermann
Philip Dorn
Bonita Granville
CinematographyRobert H. Planck
Edited byGeorge Boemler
Music byFranz Waxman
Distributed byMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release date
  • November 1, 1940 (1940-11-01)
Running time
98 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$1,205,000[1][2]
Box office$1,357,000 (Domestic earnings)[1]
$1,007,000 (Foreign earnings)[1]

Escape is a 1940 drama film about an American in pre-World War II Nazi Germany who discovers his mother is in a concentration camp and tries desperately to free her. It starred Norma Shearer, Robert Taylor, Conrad Veidt and Nazimova. It was adapted from the novel of the same name by Grace Zaring Stone.

Plot

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Famous German stage actress Emmy Ritter (Nazimova) is held in a Nazi concentration camp. She is scheduled to be executed soon, but the sympathetic camp doctor, Ditten (Philip Dorn), has been a fan since childhood and offers to deliver a letter from her to her children...afterwards.

Emmy's son Mark Preysing (Robert Taylor), an American citizen, travels to Germany in search of his mother, but nobody, not even frightened old family friends, want anything to do with him. A German official tells Mark that she has been arrested and advises him to return to the United States.

The postmark of a returned letter guides Mark to the region where she is being held. There, he meets by chance Countess Ruby von Treck (Norma Shearer), an American-born widow, but she also does not want to become involved, at least at first. Then, she asks her lover, General Kurt von Kolb (Conrad Veidt), about Emmy and learns that she has been judged a traitor in a secret trial and sentenced to death.

At a concert, Mark encounters Doctor Ditten, who takes the opportunity to deliver Emmy's letter. Then, Ditten drugs Emmy into a coma, making it appear as if she has died. He tells Mark what he has done. Mark sends longtime family servant Fritz Keller (Felix Bressart) to collect the coffin, but the American's nervousness raises the suspicion of the political police and he is brought to the camp for questioning. He is allowed to take his mother's body away.

When the road is blocked by snow, Mark is forced to find heat and shelter for his mother at the house of the countess. The next day, he meets von Kolb, who is jealous of the younger man. Later, when Mark and a disguised Emmy leave for the airport, von Kolb guesses what is happening (from Mark's earlier lack of reaction to the news of his mother's "death") and confronts the countess. She begs him not to interfere, but he is implacable. Knowing about his health problems, she taunts him with her love of Mark, which provokes him into having a heart attack, giving her new friends time to escape.

Cast

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Box office

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According to MGM records, the film earned $2,364,000 at the box office, resulting in a profit of $345,000.[2]

Notes

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  1. ^ a b c Glancy, H. Mark "When Hollywood Loved Britain: The Hollywood 'British' Film 1939-1945" (Manchester University Press, 1999)
  2. ^ a b The Eddie Mannix Ledger, Los Angeles: Margaret Herrick Library, Center for Motion Picture Study.
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