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词条 The Lost One
释义

  1. Plot

  2. Main cast

  3. Reception

  4. References

  5. Further reading

  6. External links

{{Infobox film
| name=The Lost One
| director=Peter Lorre
| writer=Peter Lorre
Benno Vigny
Axel Eggebrecht
Helmut Käutner
| starring=Peter Lorre
Karl John
Renate Mannhardt
Gisela Trowe
| producer=Arnold Pressburger
| music=Willy Schmidt-Gentner
| cinematography= Václav Vích
| editing = Carl Otto Bartning
| studio = Arnold Pressburger Filmproduktion
| distributor = National-Filmverleih
| released= 7 September 1951
| runtime=98 minutes
| country = West Germany
| language = German
}}The Lost One (German: Der Verlorene) is a 1951 West German drama film directed by Peter Lorre and starring Lorre, Karl John and Renate Mannhardt. It is an art film in the film noir style, based on a true story. Lorre wrote, directed, and starred in this film, his only film as director or writer. The film's translated name has been used as the title of his biography.[1]

The film's sets were designed by the art director Franz Schroedter.

Plot

The story is told through a series of flashbacks. Dr. Rothe (Peter Lorre) is a German scientist doing secret research for the Nazi government during World War II. After he discovers that his fiancée has been selling secrets to the Allies, he murders her. This is covered up by the German government. After the war, Rothe is working under an alias as a doctor for displaced persons. After seeing one of the Nazi officers who helped cover up his crime, Rothe is overcome by guilt about his wartime crimes.

Main cast

  • Peter Lorre as Dr. Karl Rothe, alias Dr. Karl Neumeister
  • Karl John as Hösch, alias Nowak
  • Helmuth Rudolph as Colonel Winkler
  • Johanna Hofer as Frau Hermann
  • Renate Mannhardt as Inge Hermann
  • Eva Ingeborg Scholz as Ursula Weber
  • Lotte Rausch as Woman on Train
  • Gisela Trowe as Prostitute
  • Hansi Wendler as Rothe's Secretary
  • Kurt Meister as Preefke
  • Alexander Hunzinger as Drunk

Reception

The film was unsuccessful with most of the German audiences in the 1950s, who tried to forget the Nazi era and preferred Heimatfilme. Der Verlorene has since achieved more recognition.

References

1. ^{{cite book|last=Youngkin|first=Stephen D.|title=The Lost One: A Life of Peter Lorre|year=2005|publisher=University Press of Kentucky|location=Lexington, KY|isbn=0-813-12360-7}}

}}

Further reading

  • Article by Robert Keser
  • [https://movies.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9E0CE3DE1638F932A3575BC0A962948260 Review in the New York Times]

External links

  • {{IMDb title|0044188|The Lost One }}
  • Peter Lorre and "Der Verlorene"
{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Lost One, The}}{{1950s-Germany-film-stub}}

12 : 1951 films|1950s drama films|German black-and-white films|Film noir|Films about Nazi Germany|Films directed by Peter Lorre|German drama films|German-language films|West German films|Films shot in Hamburg|Films set in Hamburg|Films set in the 1940s

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