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- The Thirty-Nine Steps
-
-
- (September 23, 1935)
-
- The Thirty-Nine Steps neatly converts its essential
- implausibility into an asset by stressing the difficulties which
- confront its hero when he tries to tell outsiders about the
- predicament he is in. A young Canadian named Richard Hannay
- (Robert Donat), he finds himself one evening, as the result of
- nothing more daring than a visit to a London music hall,
- entertaining in his flat a girl who tells him that she is a
- counter-espionage agent protecting England from an international
- ring which is selling the secrets of the Air Ministry and that
- she has just committed a murder. Hannay considers this nonsense
- until the next morning, when he finds his guest dying with a
- knife in her back. Thus assured of her veracity, he constitutes
- himself heir to her quest and with the meager information she
- has given him sets out to solve the riddle of the Thirty-Nine
- Steps.
-
- In the last two years, by making a specialty of melodrama,
- the English cinema industry sometimes appears to have taken its
- motto from the words of a song popular in the U.S.a year ago.
- "Here Come the British with a Bang, Band." The Thirty-Nine Steps
- is the most effective demonstration to date of Director Alfred
- Hitchcock's method of artful understatement and its success,
- which has already been sensational abroad, should be a lesson
- to his Hollywood imitators. The film is an adaption of a novel
- written 20 years ago by John Buchan.
-
-