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Movies Similar to The 39 Steps (1935)

The 39 Steps (1935)
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This classic British thriller was one of Alfred Hitchcock's first major international successes, and it introduced a number of the stylistic and thematic elements that became hallmarks of his later work. Richard Hannay (Robert Donat), a Canadian rancher on vacation in England, attends a music hall performance by "Mr. Memory" (Wylie Watson); in the midst of the show, shots ring out and Richard flees the theater. Moments later, a terrified woman (Lucie Mannheim) begs Richard to help her; back at his room, she tells him that she's a British spy whose life has been threatened by international agents waiting outside. Richard is certain that she's mad until she reappears at his door in the morning, near death with a knife in her back, a map in her hand, and muttering something about "39 Steps." Discovering that a group of thugs are indeed waiting outside, Richard slips away and takes the first train to the Scottish town on the dead woman's map. Richard learns that he's now wanted by the police for murder, and he must find a way to clear his name. He begins trying to do so with the help of a woman he meets en route, Pamela (Madeleine Carroll), who serves as his unwitting assistant, even after she tries to turn him in. The 39 Steps was later remade in 1959 and 1978 -- both without Hitchcock's participation. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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Starring:
Robert DonatMadeleine Carroll, (more)
Director(s):
Alfred Hitchcock
Format(s):
DVD
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Greg W.

First, this DVD comes with some great extras, including a old, cruddy-looking documentary that is surprisingly informative. In half an hour, it shows you how Hitchcock developed his style and refined his style in his earliest movies, all done in the U.K. But the main feature here is "The 39 Steps" and this is easily the best of his early, British pictures, not to mention his first start-to-finish good movie. Everything falls into place here and while it's not as flashy or glamorous as his later pictures, it's funny, entertaining, sharp, and suspenseful, everything you'd find in a good Hitchcock movie.

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Robert R.

I kept moving this down my queue and finally caught it on late TV. I watched because I'm a fan of Robert Donat ("Goodbye Mr. Chips"). This film is enjoyable for intellectual curiosity in watching an old classic. It's one of Hitchcock's very first. It's not frightful or shocking for having a murder in it. Rather, it's a tame quirky, spy drama. There's a good, brief, train-chase sequence. The acting is good (as light as this comes off). For a Hitchcock film, don't expect any kind of a wallop. If you have been debating on this one, I'll be honest and say it wasn't worth staying up late for and I wish I hadn't wasted time shuffling it around in my queue so many times. It's good but no big deal.

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Haik S.

A witty 1930s one-man-against-the-world movie by Hitchcock. Donat and Carroll's sniping at each other and reluctant romance as they flee across Scotland is very funny. The movie's attitude towards relationships is sensible and not held back by tradition, and so the romance running throughout feels very modern. You feel like Hitchcock enjoyed making this movie as he throws in music-hall humor, sped up chase scenes, an out of place autogyro shot, and changes a Scottish place name to "Killin".

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