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In post-WWII Europe, courier Mike Kells (Tyrone Power) is assigned by the State Department to fly to from Paris to Salzburg and get a top-secret document from Sam Carew (James Millican). Mike falls asleep on the flight, on the shoulder of passenger Joan Ross (Patricia Neal). Sam is being tailed by two men at the Salzburg railway station. Mike boards the same train and in the dining car, sits near a woman Sam seems to know. In a tunnel, the train car lights malfunction. Mike sees the two men throw Carew's body off the train. Mike whistle stops the train, and gets off to remain with Carew's body. US Army Col. Mark Cagle (Stephen McNally) and Sgt. Ernie Guelvada (Karl Malden) interrogate Mike, and order Mike to travel to Trieste to find the woman. Guelvada goes along. She is identified as Janine Betki (Hildegard Knef), a singer and a possible Russian agent. Mike goes to a club where Janine performed, and catches the end of a performance by "Maximilian", a comic impersonator. Then Mike runs into Joan. A strange man slips Mike some information, then tries to flee, but is murdered by a car in a hit-and-run. Janine tells Mike she worked with Carew, loved him, and spied on the Russians for him. The colonel insists Janine was a loyal Soviet agent. Joan is revealed to be the Russian agent when she meets with Rasumny Platov (Stefan Schnabel). Mike deduces Carew hid microfilm in his wristwatch, and retrieves the watch from the pawn shop where Janine left it, only to have Joan try to take it from him at gunpoint before she is surprised and overpowered by the faithful American Sergeant. But, the pawnbroker cleaned the watch, and removed the film. Mike is captured by the Soviets, drugged, dumped in a river, and rescued by a fishing boat. The Soviets use Maximilian impersonate the voice of Col. Cagle and fool both Janine and Mike. Janine bargains with the Soviet agent Platov for her freedom by agreeing to give the microfilm to them; in return they will accompany her on a train to the border of the security zone. In the end, the microfilm is recovered by the American authorities. Mike manages get on the train, and meets with Janine in the presence of her Soviet spymaster. When their train is sidetracked to let a train pass, Mike fights with Platov, and both he and Janine manage to escape through a window as the train with the Soviet agents moves off. A 1952 American spy film noir directed by Henry Hathaway, produced by Casey Robinson, screenplay by Casey Robinson and Liam O'Brien, based on British writer Peter Cheyney's novel "Sinister Errand" (1945), cinematography by Lucien Ballard, starring Tyrone Power, Patricia Neal, Stephen McNally, Hildegarde Neff, Karl Malden, James Millican, Stefan Schnabel, Herbert Berghof, Arthur Blake, Helene Stanley, E. G. Marshall, Nestor Paiva, Dabbs Greer, Peter Coe, and Ludwig Stossel. Charles Bronson appears as a Russian agent (uncredited), Lee Marvin as an M.P. (uncredited), and Michael Ansara is uncredited. The nightclub scene in the film features actor Arthur Blake, famous for his female impersonations, impersonating Carmen Miranda, Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Bette Davis. This film features three Academy Award winners: Patricia Neal (Best Actress), Karl Malden (Best Supporting Actor) and Lee Marvin (Best Actor). The Air France airplane was a triple tail Lockheed Constellation, the "Connie", the first intercontinental airliner. When this was made, Trieste was an independent city state, under the protection of the United Nations as the Free Territory of Trieste. The territory of Trieste was divided into two zones of occupation. Zone A was administered by the Allied Military Government (American and British Armed Forces). Zone B remained under the military administration of the Yugoslav People's Army. This state of affairs ended in 1954. When this was released, Austria was under joint Allied occupation (American, British, French and Soviet areas). Vienna, like Berlin, was divided among four zones of occupation. In 1955, as a result of the newly signed Austrian State Treaty, most of the Allied occupation armies, including the Soviet Army, withdrew from Austria. Soundtrack music: "I, Yi, Yi, Yi, Yi (I Like You Very Much)" - Music by Harry Warren, Lyrics by Mack Gordon "Home on the Range" - Music by Daniel E. Kelley "Chica Chica Boom Chic" - Music by Harry Warren, Lyrics by Mack Gordon "Again" - Music by Lionel Newman This Cloak & Dagger was telecast for the first time on April 14, 1962, as the final show of the first year of the series "NBC Saturday Night at the Movies", the first network program that broadcast first-run movie productions. Tautly directly by Henry Hathaway, this fast-paced Iron Curtain espionage thriller set early in the Cold War offers an early look at some future stars, with that shadowy, melancholy, sinister, exotic atmosphere that marks the genre, and loaded with a full cargo of exciting train sequences, tense scenes of intrigue and suspenseful chases.