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Decision Before Dawn (1951)
In director Anatole Litvak's
mostly-forgotten, Best Picture-nominated, suspenseful war film and
spy-drama shot on location - themes included patriotic
loyalty and treason; the action was set at the end of WWII in late
1944 at a time when the US' dubious military strategy to facilitate
the end of the war with the Third Reich was to recruit recently-captured,
volunteer German POWs to provide information about German military
troop movements:
- in the film's opening, the
Narrator (voice-over) asked: "Why
does a spy risk his life - for what possible reasons? If the spy
wins, he's ignored. If he loses, he's shot. But a man stays alive as
long as he's remembered and is killed only by forgetfulness. Let
the names of men like this remain unknown, but let the memories
of some of them serve as keys to the meanings of treason"
- US Colonel Devlin (Gary Merrill) was given
permission by Army Command to recruit volunteer German POWs, to serve
as traitorous espionage, double-agent spies, as
Devlin explained: "These men, I believe, if properly trained
and used, can help save American lives"
- ultimately, two possibly undependable German soldiers
- cynical ex-con, former circus tiger trainer, past Panzer factory
employee, and petty thief Sgt. Rudolf Barth (Hans Christian Blech)
- code-named "Tiger," and idealistic, peace-loving
medic Corporal Karl Maurer (Oskar Werner)
- code-named "Happy," volunteered
to work for the US military even though they knew the personal risks
(Maurer: "I believe fighting against them now (his own people)
is fighting for them") and Maurer believed his efforts could
shorten the war; they were deployed to work with untrusting, sneering,
German-hating radio-operator Lieut. Dick Rennick (Richard Basehart) after
being rigorously trained in fighting techniques (shooting, parachuting,
etc.) by coordinator Monique (Dominique Blanchar); she warned Maurer
- "Under no circumstances will you reveal your true name or identity
to anyone"
German Corporal Karl Maurer (Oskar Werner) - code-named "Happy"
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German Sgt. Rudolf Barth (Hans Christian Blech) - code-named "Tiger"
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Maurer and Barth - German POWs Held by the US
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- the two German POWs, in a no-win situation, would
be risking their own lives by becoming traitorous German deserters
sent behind enemy lines
- they were to convene at a safehouse in Mannheim,
Germany following a five-day "tourist mission" to determine
whether German General Jaeger, commanding the Fourth Corps along
the east bank of the Rhine, was actually considering surrender
and wholesale defection; Rennick was paired
with "Tiger" (who was born and raised in Mannheim) while "Happy" (taking
the assumed name of Corp. Karl Steiner) was assigned the related
task of locating the 11th Panzer Corps near Munich, which could possibly
move in to reinforce General Jaeger's troops if he actually surrendered
- the threesome parachuted out of the same plane into
Germany but split up on their way to the safehouse; "Happy" proceeded
by bus to Munich and train to Nuremberg to learn the location
of the powerful German armored unit known as the Panzers
- slightly nervous about being detected and targeted, "Happy" was
quickly befriended on the Nuremberg train by chubby German soldier
Heinz Scholtz (Wilfried Seyfert), who despicably offered to exchange
confiscated gold jewelry from Jewish Holocaust victims for "Happy's"
paper banknotes; he then identified himself as a Waffen-SS motorcycle
messenger-courier
"Happy" Befriended on Train by German Soldier Heinz Scholtz (Wilfried
Seyfert)
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"Happy" Befriended a Second Time by Scholtz at a
German Checkpoint
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Inn 'Hostess' Hilde (Hildegarde Neff)
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- on a streetcar, "Happy" was
embarrassed when recognized by Paula Schneider (Helene Thimig)
who had worked in the past for his surgeon
father in Berlin as the clinic's head nurse; she told
him that his father Dr. Friedrich Maurer was now working at the
Wurzburg base hospital nearby; he was also dismayed to hear
that the Panzer Corps had moved on two days earlier to Crailsheim;
at a checkpoint during questioning about his unstamped papers, "Happy"
was saved and reacquainted with Scholtz, who whisked him away to
a forbidden black-market inn near Crailsheim; at
the inn, Scholtz bragged about the Hitler regime:
"We've given the world 12 years it will never forget. And
no matter what they do, they'll never get us out of their system"
- "Happy" met and
danced with a "hostess" (hooker)
and saddened, self-hating war widow named Hilde (Hildegarde Neff);
later in the evening in his room after she admitted that she was
"dirty, miserable and alone," he romantically
rejected her; however, she warned him that Scholtz was suspicious
of him: ("All I know is they're after you")
- as time was diminishing
in his mission (and he was being targeted as an enemy parachutist
still at large), "Happy" was pulled aside due to
his medic background, to provide medical attention to Oberst (Colonel)
von Ecker (O.E. Hasse) in his castle headquarters, who
was ailing from a heart condition; he saved the
ruthless commander's life when he suffered an attack, and was
able to accidentally learn the location of the Panzer Corps (he spotted
a detailed map on the Colonel's desk); "Happy"
was rewarded by being taken to the front at Heidelberg on an open transport,
but everyone was ordered to leave the truck and cross on foot due to
a destroyed bridge
- during the chaos of an Allied air strike, Gestapo
SS officer Corp. Ernst Brandenbacher (Arno Assmann) (who had been
tipped off by Scholtz) made an attempt on "Happy's" life by shooting
at him: ("You won't get away, Steiner. By now, they know all about
you everywhere. We could have taken you a long time ago, but I hoped
that you would lead me to the others. I hoped to get all of you");
"Happy" shot back, killed Brandenbacher, and narrowly escaped, although
he realized he was on a security blacklist of deserters/spies
- he proceeded back to the heavily-bombed city of
Mannheim, and after a tense flight from suspicious authorities,
he met up with "Tiger" and Lieut. Rennick
to share his findings, but his report about the Panzers was unable
to be communicated further due to a damaged radio
- the group heard a presumably
'faked' report that gravely-wounded General Jaeger had been put
under SS guard in a Heidelberg hospital - and therefore could
not surrender, and German troop movements suggested that the US
could fall into a trap; Rennick, "Happy" and "Tiger" were
faced with a treacherous return to Armentières, France (by
swimming across the icy cold Rhine River to the American-held side)
- once they arrived at the apartment of "Tiger's"
sister-in-law, "Tiger" announced he would not attempt to return
to France: "When it's all over, our own people will spit in our
faces. And you? You will say thank you and fly home"; Rennick refused
to listen: "You're in this now, and neither of you is backing out";
at the river-bank, Rennick
was forced to shoot "Tiger" to death, to silence him
when he attempted to get away
- during their panicky efforts to save themselves, Rennick and "Happy" made
it across the river to an island, where "Happy" (whose
legs had cramped up) decided to bravely sacrifice himself and allow
himself to be captured in order to allow Rennick to safely escape
On the Bank of the Rhine River
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Death of "Tiger"
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Swimming to the Island
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On the Island
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Watching as "Happy" Surrendered
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"Happy" Taken Prisoner by the Germans
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- Rennick returned with "Happy's" crucial
troop information, while regretfully realizing that his compatriot
would probably be tortured and shot as a traitor/spy; Devlin shrugged
off the loss of "Happy" as a necessary consequence of war - "In a
war, to save lives, you use whoever you can. Trouble is, you always
lose the best ones, 'cause it's always the best ones who are willing
to take a chance"
- Rennick was more regretful about the sacrifice -
as described by the Narrator (similar to the film's opening narration):
"A man stays alive as long as he's remembered, and is killed only
by forgetfulness. So long, Happy. Let your real name remain unknown,
but let the memory of your sacrifice serve as a key to the meanings
of treason. It was to me"
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US Colonel Devlin (Gary Merrill)
US Lieut. Dick Rennick (Richard Basehart)
Training Coordinator Monique (Dominique Blanchar)
The Threesome: Rennick, "Tiger" and "Happy" About
to Parachute into Germany
"Happy" on a Bus to Munich
"Happy" on His Mission at Nuremberg
Hilde Dancing with "Happy"
Hilde Telling Her Sad Life's Story to "Happy"
Oberst (Colonel)
von Ecker (O.E. Hasse)
"Happy" Accidentally Learning the Location of the 11th
Panzer Corps on a Desk Map
"Happy" Being Shot at by Gestapo SS Officer Brandenbacher
"Happy" (Karl Steiner) Identified On a Security Black;ist of Targeted
Deserters, Spies and Espionage Agents
Rennick's Thoughts About "Happy's" Loss
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