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  • Warning: Spoilers
    Alfred Hitchcock announced a call to arms in a brilliant and amusing thriller, "The Lady Vanishes."

    The lady in question is Miss Froy (Dame May Witty), a splendid eccentric innocent old governess (in reality a British secret agent), who is kidnapped by the smooth Dr. Hartz (Paul Lukas), really the master enemy spy...

    Involved in the rescue are Gilbert (Michael Redgrave), a sincere young musicologist trying on using up unwisely his life on unfruitful pursuits; Iris Henderson (Margaret Lockwood) a pretty girl who is returning to London to sacrifice herself on the altar of nobility - she has accepted to marry a weedy little English count; and a hilarious sporting couple, Chalders and Caldicott (Basil Radford and Naunton Wayne), whose only concern and topic conversation is the cricket match--will they make it back in home for the "big game."

    Other characters include Percy (Cecil Parker), the pompous lawyer who is constantly afraid that his affair with Linden Travers will be discovered... Above all he does not want to be involved... He is the voice of pacifism and self-control... While the others fight it out with the enemy, he rushes from the coach waving a white handkerchief... He is shot, and dies never understanding why...

    Hitchcock (and you never know with him) creates a multi-sided movie (superb, suspenseful, brilliantly funny), extending the power of stereotypes by caricaturing itself, making the audience express with laughter, and in a way they forget that they have just accepted some unpleasant tasting medicine...
  • Alfred Hitchcock was noted for his light comic touch, but history records only one attempt at a full-out comedy, 1955's "The Trouble With Harry." The real trouble with "Harry" is it's not funny, but fortunately Hitchcock did leave us with a much surer and defter comedy in the guise of a thriller. Enter "The Lady Vanishes."

    The opening scene gets a lot of hackles from people, as we find ourselves in a mountain valley where, after the credits roll, the camera glides over what is obviously a miniature train set. We even see a toy roadster glide by as the camera closes on the exterior of a model house.

    Why, it's so primitive and fake! exclaim viewers accustomed to "Matrix"-style FX.

    But they miss the point, and not just because they fail to take account of the time when the film was made. Here's what I think: Hitchcock shot the scene with a deliberate nod at the hokeyness of it, reminding his audience from the start that this is not the real thing but play-acting, to be taken as such. He knows it looks a bit phony (though the arresting pan-and-zoom would be the sort of opening other directors would imitate as soon as the technology let them). The focus of "The Lady Vanishes" is not politics, or even mystery. It is fun, in the same non-critical way as a child's entertainment. In this, Hitchcock succeeds, and creates no mere time capsule but a vessel of entertainment that has withstood decades of changing fashion, because it is first, last, and always fun.

    "The Lady Vanishes" is the sort of film that works on pace, craft, and charm. The plot is well thought-out, provided you yourself try not to think about it much. There's really no reason for the story to go down the way it does, and once the movie is over, you begin to see the holes. Why is it necessary for British intelligence to go through so much trouble for info that could be just as easily delivered by telegram, or diplomatic pouch? Why, if you cold-bloodedly swipe a woman from a train, do you leave a witness behind to blurt out that there's been a disappearance? How come a name written on the inside of a train compartment window is erased by a blast of locomotive smoke across the outside of the window? But the engaging plot does what it is supposed to, keeping you interested and wondering what will happen next, rather than why it is happening the way it is.

    The storyline of "The Lady Vanishes" is unlike any Hitchcock film. It's so light and airy that it reminds me more of a Tintin comic book, with the mythical Slavic nation of Vandreka the sort of simultaneously quaint and suspicious setting Herge would stick Captain Haddock and the Thompson Twins. Leave aside your sophisticated Dashiell Hammett-fed expectations for a moment. If you let yourself go, you will be transported, and quite entertained. Hitchcock never meshed comedy so thoroughly in the body of a story as he does here. Even "North By Northwest" has its serious spots, but "The Lady Vanishes" features a tense fight in a baggage car that's right out of Abbott & Costello and a climactic shootout that pauses for jokes between Caldicott and Charters, the cricket-mad pair who are a non-stop font of humor.

    Margaret Lockwood is an effective plot vehicle as doughty Iris, who refuses to believe a knock on the head made her imagine the presence of the title character, Miss Froy. Michael Redgrave (Vanessa's pop) is a revelation as Gilbert, the folk-music scholar who half-humors, half-believes her strange tale until a stray scrap of trash converts him to her cause. He has a wonderful Errol Flynn-like quality, with his toothbrush mustache and his way with a quip.

    Speaking of quips, the dialogue in this movie sparkles throughout, as when the barrister tells his mistress "The law, like Caesar's wife, must be above reproach," and she replies "Even when the law just spent six weeks with Caesar's wife?" Or when Iris asks how she was supposed to have replaced Miss Froy's face with that of the sinister Madame Kummer, and Gilbert replies: "Any change would be an improvement."

    Interesting also for the opening, which ambles on for about 20 minutes before it starts to go anywhere, establishing the characters and the comic tone without offering a whiff of what the mystery might be. The close, too, with villains who seem oddly detached once the story is resolved ('Jolly good luck to them,' Paul Lukas observes enigmatically.) But that's for film scholars to muse over.

    Hitchcock was never as agreeable a companion as he was here. And few films will put the kind of smile on your face like 'The Lady Vanishes,' no matter how long ago it was made.
  • From 1938, The Lady Vanishes is clearly where Hitch was getting comfortable in his trade. Starting slowly, it soon revs up with mystery and intrigue. But I think that was the whole point. A seemingly innocuous day can lead itself into adventure.

    Starting in some remote European village, a woman meets a little old lady. Getting on the train the next day, the old lady vanishes without a trace while she is asleep. When she asks about the lady, people say that there was no old lady. The mystery then ensues as our leading lady tries to uncover the plot behind a woman she knows was there.

    The main aspect of this movie is the everyday humor that is applied. The two English fellows who are only looking for the latest cricket scores, score themselves some remarkable laughs. Our hero that comes to the leading woman's assistance is funny and charming himself. The time spent at the beginning in the hotel may seem to be off topic, making a viewer wonder where the mystery is, but the point is that the viewer becomes acquainted with the characters and are much more believable to the viewer. Again, I think Hitch was showing us our next door neighbors and how they can rise up against unusually dangerous circumstances. I think my analysis of Hitch would be his championing the moral fiber of everyman. I think that is why Hitchcock films still stand today as some of the best ever made.

    This movie receives my major recommendation. Not done yet. I got more to view and review. What fun!
  • Although Hitchcock was noted for his wit and often sprinkled his films with wickedly funny moments, he seldom gave comic elements such a free reign as he did in THE LADY VANISHES, which is among the most memorable of his early British films. Charmingly cast with Margaret Lockwood, Michael Redgrave, and Dame May Witty in the leads, the extremely witty script mixes 1930s romantic froth with increasingly tense suspense in the story of sharp witted young woman (Lockwood) who befriends an elderly lady (Witty) during a train journey--and is extremely disturbed when, as the title states, the lady vanishes.

    Many regard this as the best of Hitchcock's early work, and it is easy to see why: the film demonstrates his growing talent for building suspense from an unlikely mix of the commonplace and the incredible. He is also remarkably blessed in his cast, with Lockwood and Redgrave possessing considerable chemistry and Dame May Witty particularly endearing in one of the character roles at which she so excelled; the supporting cast is also particularly memorable.

    Hitchcock guides them all with never a misstep through a complex script that progresses from very lighthearted to extremely sinister and then back again, and the result leaves audiences with both the satisfaction of a well-made thriller and the glow of a romantic comedy. Although it lacks the subtle tones of his later work, THE LADY VANISHES is among my own favorites by Hitchcock, and fans who have never seen it are in for a real treat. Highly recommended.

    Gary F. Taylor, aka GFT, Amazon Reviewer
  • The Lady Vanishes is a wonderful piece of fluff, the culmination of Hitchcock's British period, after which he started to explore more serious themes in his American films. Of course the basic plot is absurd, centering around the most ridiculous way to get a secret message through one can think of, and why did.....o well, never mind, it's the handling that matters, and Hitchcock achieves a near perfect balance here of humour and suspense that he only really matched on one other film, North By Northwest.

    The film spends 20 or so minutes just introducing it's characters, but they are all so great, especially the two men so obsessed with returning to a cricket match that a case of disappearance and possibly murder is relatively unimportant, that it hardly matters, while Michael Redgrave and Margaret Lockwood simply sparkle as the main couple who of course initially can't stand each other. Once on the train, the ensuring mystery and sleuthing are riveting,and full of fantastic little details- the name on the window, the nun with high heeled shoes, the fight amidst a magician's paraphenalia The final shootout is excellently staged and still quite exciting. The laughs are constant, with some helarious lines, but they never detract from the suspense. Of course there's those shoddy model shots, but hell, this is a film from 1939!

    Hitchcock had countless classics to come, including such complex masterpieces as Vertigo and Rear Window, but the delightful, hugely enjoyable The Lady Vanishes is a little masterpiece of it's own.
  • Before Alfred Hitchcock struck gold with such well known films as "Vertigo" and "Psycho," he made films in his native country: England. It was in the UK that he filmed such 1930s classics as "The 39 Steps," "The Man Who Knew Too Much" and "Sabotage." Among these was another slightly forgotten classic, 1938's "The Lady Vanishes." It starts as a cheery lightweight romp, it becomes a suspense-filled mystery, and it ends as an engaging thriller. Most movies nowadays get stuck in a rut and become nothing more than a run-of-the-mill action extravaganza set in a simple plot which serves as the way to get the characters on screen. Hitchcock did something else: He cared about the plot, stretched it out and made it elaborately intriguing, and then filled it in with the characters afterwards.

    There's a mastermind behind this, and it belongs to that big horror master himself. "The Lady Vanishes" is one of his best early films (and it would be his last British film), a true sign of what was to come in the later years of his life. It was remade in 1979 with Elliot Gould and Cybill Shepherd, but lacked the freshness and striking narrative that the original contains.

    In Germany, prior to World War II, a young woman travels cross country in a train, with an eccentric woman known as Miss Froy (Dame May Whitty) as a companion. Froy is a short little woman who reeks of naivety and innocence. But perhaps not everything is as plain and simple as it seems--after falling asleep on the train for a short time period, Iris (Margaret Lockwood), the young traveler, awakens to find Miss Froy absent from her seat opposite herself.

    The worst thing of all is that no one recalls having seen a little old lady aboard the train. Iris looks like a delusional loony, and she even starts to doubt the story herself, when odd clues start to turn up throughout the train. Enlisting the help of Gilbert Redman (Michael Redgrave), a goofy man who is crazy enough to believe Iris' story, the two search in a frantic race before their train meets its arrival and Miss Froy is unloaded--if she's even still on the train.

    The fundamentals of the story lie in its plot, and also in its characters. They're all lovable, from Gilbert to Caldicott (Naunton Wayne) and Charters (Basil Redford), two traveling men looking to get back to England for a cricket tournament. After the train is stopped towards the end of the film and a band of Germans tries to board the plane, one of the men quips to the other something to the effect of, "We'll never be back for the cricket match, now."

    It's interesting how so many mysteries make so much sense by the end, but you can't for the life of you guess the ending ahead of time. Sometimes this is not the case (I guessed the "surprise" ending of "Identity" from the trailer), especially nowadays with each mystery film being a retread of "The Sixth Sense." But back in the Hitch days, most every mystery was a complex one that had a totally unexpected climatic ending.

    Filmed on an extremely low budget, "The Lady Vanishes" surprisingly boasts some amazing special effects in some areas, at least for the decade the movie was filmed in. One of these is when Gilbert climbs the exterior of the train, and on the opposite tracks another train swooshes by, knocking him backwards. You find this type of low-budget effect nowadays in homemade movies, but then it was quite good.

    But other scenes are not quite as exquisite. The opening scene post credits, in which the camera swoops down into a small German village, is filmed well but the background and foreground are both models. If you look closely, you can see that the village folk walking along the street aren't actually walking at all--they're miniature figurines! Look for the little toy car that drives by behind the building--stuff like this is classic! But even with a horrible budget Hitchcock manages to control the scene the way he wants. It shows that even with a minimal amount of money he still tried to make everything intriguing and mysterious.

    And that he did. Not only is "The Lady Vanishes" one of the best mysteries of all time, it's one of the best films of all time, too. It takes a while to start, but once it does, does it ever! It's low budget, yes, but not nearly as hard to make out as "The 39 Steps," one of Hitch's earlier British films. There are a lot of Hitchcock fanatics out there, and they may not have even heard of some of his earlier, lesser known films. Plus, they may be turned off by how hard it is to make out dialogue and scenes. ("The Man Who Knew Too Much" is notorious for being hard to understand.) And so for interested Hitchcock fans, your journey starts here.

    Note: Towards the end of the film, look for a quick Alfred Hitchcock cameo. He's the man at Victoria Station who walks by with a cigarette.

    5/5 stars.

    • John Ulmer
  • Sylviastel16 December 2005
    Dame Mae Witty gives a memorable performance as the old woman who goes missing. The rest of the cast is great with Margaret Lockwood as the woman she befriends on the train. Sir Michael Redgrave also is wonderful as the obvious love interest of Lockwood. The film is truly filled with Hitchcock's stamp all over it. He takes a simple story and makes us not only intriguing but entertaining as well. They remade the film again in 1978 more than 40 years after this film debuted in British cinema. This classic film should not be mixed up with that one. I enjoyed this film. It had its humorous moments. I think this film is really wonderful to watch without being too much. Nowadays filmmakers can take note by Hitchcock's genius and talent. You do not need grand special effects today to create a memorable film but great actors and decent writing. This film is a great film about a good old fashioned mystery without deterring the audience. This film is good old fashioned movie making at its best.
  • "The Lady Vanishes" is one of Director Alfred Hitchcock's best British made films, in fact I think it's one of his all time best.

    Set in pre-WWII somewhere in Europe, A group of people board a train bound for England after having spent the previous night in an overcrowded hotel. Iris Henderson (Margaret Lockwood) befriends a kindly old governess/teacher, Miss Froy (Dame May Witty). When Iris is struck by a falling flowerpot, Miss Froy promises to take care of her as they board the train.

    After having tea together, the two women return to their compartment where Iris falls asleep. When she awakes, Miss Froy is gone, totally vanished. The people sharing the compartment, "The Baroness" (Mary Clare), Signor and Signora Doppo (Philip Leaver, Selma Van Dias) deny ever having seen Miss Froy. Doctor Hartz (Paul Lukas) comes to her aid and is convinced that the bump Iris received to her head may have caused a memory lapse.

    Iris then meets Gilbert Redman (Michael Redgrave) whom she had met the previous evening at the hotel. He offers his help. Skeptical at first, he soon comes to believe Iris' story. Eric Todhunter (Cecil Parker) and "Mrs." Todhunter (Linden Travers) deny seeing Miss Froy because they are in the midst of an extra marital affair. Two British "gentlemen", Caldicott (Naughton Wayne) and Charters (Basil Radford) though having seen Miss Froy with Iris, don't wish to become involved.

    When Dr. Hartz brings a patient aboard the train, Gilbert and Iris become suspicious and.......................................

    As was his custom, Hitchcock pits his heroine against all odds in her quest to find Miss Froy. The suspense builds as the situation becomes more hopeless. This would be a theme that the master of suspense would use throughout his career. He also liked to work trains into many of his plots, including this film of which three quarters takes place on board a train.

    The scene in the hotel showing Caldicott and Charters sharing a bed (and a pair of pajamas) never would have gotten by the American censors. The relationship between the Todhunters as well, was quite obvious and rare for the American cinema of the day.

    This is one of Hitchcock's best films and hasn't suffered because of age. Highly recommended.
  • While traveling in continental Europe, a rich young playgirl realizes that an elderly lady seems to have disappeared from the train.

    How to classify this film? Some consider it among Hitchcock's best. And perhaps it is. But I think it is not that simple. He entered the production part of the way through, so should we give him less credit than for other films where he was on board from day one? Maybe, maybe not. It was also his last film in England (his "farewell" film), so should we compare his English period to his American period, or put them all together?

    Mostly these are silly questions. The film stands on its own merits -- a great story, well executed, with more humor than your standard Hitchcock. The introduction of Caldicott and Charters is a great touch, and this pair have gone on to make other films (though, to my knowledge, probably not ones that are in continuity with this).

    I love the way certain scenes are shot (such as the death of the musician), and I love the mystery and intrigue of a spy/detective plot. While I would not rank this in the "top tier" of Hitchcock's work ("Strangers on a Train" and "Rope" would fill that niche), it is still better than most of the other options out there.
  • "Well, anyway, I refuse to be discouraged. Faint heart never found old lady."

    Ah, this was a great movie! One of Hitch's best, and certainly one of his most entertaining. It was funny, thrilling, and just plain old fun to watch.

    The story is quite simple. A sweet old lady disappears on a train, and the only person who admits ever seeing her, is a young woman who met her the night before. As she searches for the old lady, she's helped by a roguish young man, and they soon begin to wonder just who this lady is, where she went, and why on earth would so many people go through so much trouble to make it seem like she never existed. It all makes for a very compelling mystery. 

    The Lady Vanishes features some of the best characters I've ever seen in a Hitchcock film. Margaret Lockwood and Michael Redgrave were great as the two main protagonists, and the witty banter between the two was equaled only by the two dry, cricket-obsessed Englishmen who provided so much of the humor of the film. I found this movie to be similar to Rear Window (no wonder I enjoyed it so much), as there are many subplots among the minor characters that are almost as interesting as the main story. 

    I firmly believe that this is the best I've seen of Hitchcock's early movies. It has everything from shootouts to nuns in high heels. The Lady Vanishes will convert you to being a fan of Alfred, if you're somehow (drugs?) not already.
  • Prismark1011 March 2018
    Hitchcock's The Lady Vanishes is a transitional film of a director who is soon to go to Hollywood where he will have a bigger budget and more resources.

    There is an element of propaganda in this film as war is looming in Europe, it is also whimsical as well as being an effective thriller.

    Margaret Lockwood plays Iris going through Europe on a train who sat with an elderly children's governess Miss Froy who has disappeared. The other passengers on the train ever deny seeing this Miss Froy. Only Michael Redgrave who plays Gilbert and has previously irritated Iris with his folk music half believes her story, so he helps her out. Both of them uncover a conspiracy as Miss Froy holds valuable information that she needs to get to Britain.

    Alfred Hitchcock portrays a rather nonchalant view of Britain. Iris is a bit of a playgirl due to marry someone wealthy, Gilbert is a bit of a scamp, a musician and a researcher. There are the foreign office duo, Charters and Caldicott who are more interested in catching the cricket score than what is going on in front of them until it is too late and then they take action. Another passenger is a pacifist refusing to engage in a gun battle.

    The film's finale is rather action packed once the truth is revealed.

    The standout performance is by Michael Redgrave who plays it fast and loose, a fun packed frothy performance that makes you forget he would become a theatrical knight of the same generation as Olivier and Gielgud.

    The film does look rather creaky now, some of the characters are irritating. However it is still an important resume of an outstanding director as his own work progressed.
  • Miss Froy (Dame May Whitty) mysteriously vanishes while on a long train journey through the Swiss Alps during a cold winter. Margaret Lockwood as Iris Henderson is the only person on the train who believes that Miss Froy has disappeared (or in fact that she even existed!) but Lockwood manages to persuade fellow traveller music scholar Gilbert Redman (Michael Redgrave) to assist her in the search. Basil Radford and Naunton Wayne (as cricket fans Charters and Caldicott) have seen Miss Froy but are fearful that an investigation into her disappearance might delay the train and therefore stop them getting to Manchester in time for their beloved Test Match so they decide to stay silent. Paul Lukas (Dr Hartz) tries to convince Lockwood she is mistaken and has imagined the entire episode due to a blow on the head she received prior to the train journey. Cecil Parker (Mr Todhunter) has his own reasons for keeping quiet as he does not want his illicit affair with Linden Travers to become public knowledge. Several other passengers on the train have seen Miss Froy but do not want to be involved which confuses our heroine and places her in grave danger as the journey progresses.

    Shame about the fake model shots at the start of the film but this aside Hitchcock skilfully keeps the suspense at a high level and the witty script by Sidney Gilliatt and Frank Launder is both entertaining and enthralling. Hitchcock obviously has a liking for trains as his films have often featured long train sequences. "The 39 Steps", "Strangers on a Train" and "North by Northwest" are just three classic examples.

    Some favourite lines from the film:

    Margaret Lockwood: "I've no regrets - I've been everywhere and done everything. I've eaten caviar at Cannes, sausage rolls at the dogs. I've played baccarat at Biarritz, and darts with the rural dean. What is there left for me but marriage?".

    Basil Radford (on the phone to London): "No, you don't follow me sir - I'm enquiring about the Test Match in Manchester. Cricket, sir, cricket!! What! You don't know! You can't be in England and not know the Test score!".

    Margaret Lockwood (to Michael Redgrave): "I know there's a Miss Froy - she's as real as you are".

    Paul Lukas (to Margaret Lockwood): "There is no Miss Froy - there never was a Miss Froy. Merely a very subjective image".

    Although "The Lady Vanishes" is one of Hitchcock's very early black and white British films (1938) it anticipates the future expertise, skills and talent of this accomplished director and is well worth viewing. If you are waiting to spot Hitchcock's regular cameo appearance this doesn't take place until the closing minutes of the film so settle back and enjoy the plot then watch out for Hitchcock smoking a cigar at Victoria Station almost at the end! "The Lady Vanishes" was remade in colour in 1979 with Elliott Gould and Cybill Shepherd but the Hitchcock version is definitely the one to see. 10/10. Clive Roberts.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I was genuinely entertained by "The Lady Vanishes", however I can't help wondering why the film garners such rave reviews along with it's standing in the IMDb film rankings. I'll readily admit that maybe it's me, as I've found myself against the majority from time to time.

    The premise of the film is an intriguing one, a pair of women board a train in a mythical central European country. Though unknown to each other they form a friendly bond, and while Iris Henderson (Margaret Lockwood) sleeps off the effects of a bump on the noggin from an offending flower box, her elderly companion simply disappears. It turns out that Miss Froy (Dame May Witty) is an English spy (?) who harbors a secret regarding a pact between two countries.

    Miss Henderson finds a willing accomplice to the mystery in Gilbert Redman (Michael Redgrave), who provides many a witty and comical retort to situations that arise. Both find themselves confiding in the respectable Dr. Hartz (Paul Lukas) when no one believes Miss Henderson's claim; it turns out Hartz is the mastermind behind the kidnap plot. The repartee between Henderson and Redman is quick and snappy, reminiscent of Nick and Nora Charles in the "Thin Man" series.

    The first element that works against the film for me is the gun battle at a train stop. Now I know pistols can be deadly, but didn't it seem that the good guys were just a little too accurate in dispatching villain after villain from a fair distance? Then, when Redman forces the train engineers to get moving again, the curious ballistics that take out the railroad men is just too unbelievable.

    The kicker though is the manner in which Miss Froy's secret is to be delivered to her government. It's to be found in the tune of a song that she teaches Redman how to hum in case something happens to her. Fortunately, Miss Froy makes the rest of the journey safely, because jolly old Redman has his mind on other matters (Miss Henderson), and forgets the tune!

    One thing though, no matter how novel an idea may seem in modern films, they usually show up in something that went before. On the train, it takes Miss Henderson a while, but she eventually remembers that Miss Froy wrote her name on a window when she couldn't be heard above the noise. Pointing it out to Redman helps convince him that Iris isn't batty. Jody Foster's character would find herself in similar circumstances with identical support in this year's thriller - "Flightplan".
  • Some see this movie working on several levels, but I tended to see it as not being able to focus at any level. As to the thriller aspect of the story, I was unable to suspend my level of disbelief to the extent required. As to the comedy aspect, there were some clever lines that made me laugh, but the general level of foolishness seemed to sabotage the other aspects of the film - take the absurd fight in the cargo car for example. The only way the movie worked for me was as a political allegory: there are the two English gentlemen obsessing over the cricket scores and not wanting to get involved with the intrigue (i.e. the impending war), there is the lawyer being more concerned about his reputation than telling the truth (the British legal system being aloof), the pacifist waving his white flag and being gunned down (the naivety of the appeasers), the earnest Margaret Lockwood (the Cassandra who sees the truth but nobody will listen to her), and so on. The political overtones are serious indeed, but they are trivialized by the inanity of the story.

    The first twenty minutes or so in the hotel were so tedious and stagy that I almost bailed out then, but I persisted to discover some redeeming qualities. Lockwood and Redgrave make a fun couple, Naunton Wayne and Basil Radford play well off of each other, Dame May Witty is a delight, and there is some interesting camera work. But the negatives outweighed the positives for me.
  • A cracking plot, sparkling dialogue, great characters and sublime direction make The Lady Vanishes an all-time must see.

    Marking the peak of Hitchcock's British period, it is an exquisitely crafted, finely wrought, cinematic treasure, boasting a cast which reads like a veritable Who's who of British acting talent from the Golden Age of British Cinema.

    While the director, writers and supporting cast all deserve credit, the film very much belongs to its leading lady, the lovely Margaret Lockwood, who, as feisty heroine Iris Henderson, somehow manages to be heart-stoppingly beautiful, supremely sexy, spirited, cute and adorably vulnerable all at the same time! Now where can I meet a girl like that?

    The Lady Vanishes is, for every reason, but especially because of Miss Lockwood, the very best of the very best; a landmark movie which is truly unmissable! Buy it, rent it, steal it if you must, but make damn sure you see it
  • The Lady Vanishes (1938)

    A Hitchcock movie filled with mystery but lacking suspense. Which is quite fine, turning "The Lady Vanishes" into a fun movie with lots of wry jokes and clever twists. You can't take it any more seriously than Hitchcock did, and he famously had fun with his ideas. That's one reason why they are recognizably Hitch.

    This is a transitional movie for the director in many ways. For one thing it was hugely successful in Britain, and then later in the U.S., and Hitchcock soon moved to Hollywood where his stellar string of successes for over 20 years began. But that said, this is a film filled with provincial humor (that was a joke, in case you are British)--that is, you need to have a feel for British humor, and for the style of joking and making witty remarks (constantly) of the time. It's a hilarious movie. When you aren't laughing you're still tickled.

    Which is what disappoints some viewers expecting "Psycho" or something. Nope. But you'll recognize the director's hand here, mixing regular people who are misunderstood (if not quite accused of something they didn't do) and who end up having to solve the problem themselves. And so it goes, and they do rather well for a couple of ordinary folk.

    When I say there is no suspense I mean it, even when there is uncertainty. The biggest twist of the whole plot (not to be mentioned here!) is only kept from the viewer for a short while. Then the actors tell you! Yes, you are let in on the secret, and yet the movie goes on from there. That is--it's not about worrying and trying to figure it out. It's about watching the main characters work together and piece together their way out of a sticky situation. And of course eventually fall in love.

    You forget sometimes that the key element in nearly every Hitchcock movie is a love story. After all, that's what matters to most of us (or all of us?) day after day, so he zeroes in on that even as the world is threatened by uranium 235 ("Notorious"), a murderer in the apartment complex ("Rear Window"), the ghost of a previous wife ("Rebecca") and so on. (Of these, "Psycho" is an interesting exception.) So watch what is actually a romantic comedy with a dash of international intrigue in the ominous year leading up to WWII, which hasn't happened at the time of filming. Great stuff.
  • For what turned out to be his last masterpiece in the United Kingdom before leaving for Hollywood, Alfred Hitchcock went back to a familiar theme of someone being innocently caught up in intrigue.

    The someone here is the beautiful Margaret Lockwood who is being gaslighted while on a train in Eastern Europe. She's made the acquaintance of Dame May Witty who disappears from the moving train and no one but Lockwood remembers she even exists.

    Lockwood gains a sympathetic if skeptical ally in Michael Redgrave and they search the train for Witty. Of course as it is in Hitchcock films, the train's passengers and crew are not all they seem to be either and in the end the passengers have to fight for their lives.

    Although Lockwood is a striking dark beauty, not the cool blondes that Hitchcock normally favored, she's a fine Hitchcock heroine. Best in the supporting cast are Naunton Wayne and Basil Radford who seem like a pair of silly English twits whose only concern is getting back for a big cricket match. They actually come through when the chips are down.

    Viewers should also take note of Cecil Parker who plays a barrister on holiday with his mistress whose main concern is staying uninvolved lest news of a scandal kill a judicial appointment he wants. He is one absolute horse's patoot and his death must have been cheered by film audiences in the theaters.

    Alfred Hitchcock was about to leave his homeland and the less expensive British film industry for Hollywood and bigger budgets. The Lady Vanishes however is a great example of what can be done even on a skimpy budget by a master craftsman.
  • This is the best of the early Hitchcock films. The plot is absorbing, the dialogue clever and the cast great. Whether or not this was the first of the director's films to place its principal action on a moving train I cannot say, but it's a theme that would come back again in his later work, most notably in "Strangers on a Train."

    The film gets off to a somewhat rocky start with the camera panning over an Alpine inn and a train halted mid-journey by an avalanche. I agree with the review who observes that we've become spoilt by more sophisticated special effects. A Lionel half buried in a heap of bleached wheat flower just doesn't cut it nowadays. Think also of the stick figure engulfed in the munitions factory explosion in "Saboteur." I suppose directors of that era had to do with whatever was available.

    But after this point the film really takes off, and one scarcely recalls the unpromising opening. Viewers always look for the chemistry or lack thereof between actors. Well, Lockwood and Redgrave definitely have it. One cannot help but enjoy seeing how the initial sparks flying between their clashing characters develop into true love by movie's end. As the two are making their way through the train trying to locate Whitty, they move from one barely plausible predicament to another. But we love it, as one witty exchange turns quickly into another. (For example, Lockwood is asked to describe the missing Whitty and launches into an extremely detailed portrait that leaves not a single button unaccounted for. Then she ends by saying, "That's all I can remember." Counters Redgrave dryly: "Well, you can't have been paying attention.")

    Much of the film's action occurs in the fictional country of Bandrika, which seems to be a thinly disguised stand-in for nazi-controlled Austria, so recently annexed by Hitler's Germany. As an amateur linguist, I found myself trying to make sense of the made-up "Bandrikan" spoken by the natives, but of course was unable to do so. (What could it be? A Finno-Ugric language? :) Most of the time the identity of Hitchcock's villains remains deliberately vague, except in "Notorious" and "Torn Curtain," where they are nazis and communists respectively. It works better when he leaves us guessing.

    As an amateur musician I loved Hitch's "macguffin," namely, the secret formula encoded in a song which the protagonists had to memorize and carry to the Foreign Office in London. (I should think, however, that a genuine secret message might translate into something more like Schoenberg's twelve-tone music than a central European folk song, but of course that would hardly work in a film. :)

    The early Hitchcock seemed to like shootouts, as seen also in the first version of "The Man Who Knew Too Much." But shootouts are an ineffective way to convey suspense, and this is perhaps the one thing that dims what is otherwise a masterpiece.

    It's too bad the director lived long enough to see this film remade in 1979. Cybil Shepherd is no Margaret Lockwood, and it's pretty unpleasant-almost embarrassing-to see her shrieking her way through each scene. Couldn't they have waited a few years until he had passed on? They ought to have let him die in peace.
  • Of course that summary is very subjective, but I do think The Lady Vanishes is the best of his British-period films. Don't get me wrong, the 39 Steps was also extremely good, but this was better. The Lady Vanishes was in short sublime, it starts off quite lightweight, and then the tone shifts to nail-biting and even more engaging. Of course it is a comedy thriller, and works as well as one. The cinematography is crisp and efficient, the script is pretty much outstanding and the direction from Hitchcock complete with his fashioned touches and nail-biting suspense is superb. The story is relatively simple, but really works well and is well developed helped by the fact it moves very quickly. And of course the acting is first class, with Michael Redgrave charming and charismatic and Margaret Lockwood alluring and sympathetic. Then we have a deliciously dotty Dame May Witty, fine turns from Basil Radford and Naunton Wayne as cricket-mad Charters and Caldicott and Paul Lukas great as Dr Hartz. Also the atmosphere of impending war gave this film so much power. Overall, it mayn't be Hitchcock's very best or most memorable, but it is still a wonderful, sublime, well constructed and intriguing comedy thriller. 10/10 Bethany Cox
  • While "The Lady vanishes" is not as polished as Alfred Hitchcock's later brilliant works, it remains a very good suspense story. At the film's beginning we see a town model – very nice, but just a model – of a snowy village in a fictional country somewhere in Eastern Europe. I still opt for Austria: the uniforms we later see certainly appear like Austro-Hungarian military uniforms of World War I even though that war is long past. Anyway, inclement weather has forced train passengers into a hotel run by a harried manager. Many are stranded English citizens eager to return home for a variety of reasons. We are introduced to Caldicott and Charters (Naunton Wayne, Basil Radford), two buffoonish Englishmen whose main interest is leaving the "wretched" country to return in time for the Test Match (cricket). As the game is their only concern, nothing else is of interest. Caldicott and Charters are quite the superficial characters, and they will be with us with their dry humor throughout the movie. They are lucky to get a room in the overcrowded hotel, but it is the maid Anna's room. She still needs to change there, and she no qualms of undressing with the two men present. Caldicott and Charters have no choice but to share a bed and pajamas. Iris Henderson (Margaret Lockwood), an attractive but bratty socialite, is on a ski holiday with her two friends; it is her last bachelorette fling before her loveless wedding in the upcoming week. What else can she do as she feels she has done everything that she wants? Money talks, and the three young women get a nice room. Eric and Margaret Todhunter are traveling incognito; they are not married but on a tryst, cheating on their spouses. Of course Eric had told Margaret that he would divorce his wife to marry her; of course he has no intention of doing so. He values his judgeship more, that is, if he can get the position. Miss Froy (Dame May Witty), an elderly and kindly old English governess dressed in a tweed outfit, is the key personality. At a dinner table she tells Caldicott and Charters that she loves the nation that they are in, for it is a musical country. There are other persons of interest on the train, including Signor and Signora Doppo. Mr. Doppo has a dopey smile; as a circus performer he has an act called "The Vanishing Lady." In the evening the three gals are unable to sleep because the people in the room above are dancing to a clarinet. The main character in the upstairs room is raffish music scholar Gilbert (Michael Redgrave). Because these people do not stop their rumpus, the manager removes Gilbert; later he retrieves his room. Miss Froy is on her hotel room balcony listening to a street singer below, when the latter is strangled. She does not notice, but hums the tune that he was humming. The next morning all of the folks are jam-packed together waiting for the train, getting ready to leave. While Froy is bending down to get her luggage a flower-box from a second floor window, apparently aimed for her, misses and strikes Iris on the head instead, dazing her. She still manages to get on the train and wave goodbye to her two girlfriends. Before long, Iris, still lightheaded, has tea with Froy. She does not get Froy's name clearly because of surrounding noise, so Froy spells it out on the passenger car window condensation. Iris soon passes out, and when she awakens cannot locate Froy. She questions the train passengers and train stewards, but none seem to recall Froy at all. The lady has indeed vanished. Actually Caldicott and Charters certainly remember her, as they had sat together at the same dining table the previous night. But as the men want no possible interruption of a train search that will interfere with their precious cricket match back home, they feign ignorance. Eric Todhunter, too, has lied because he wants to avoid any attention to his affair with Margaret.

    On the train is Dr. Hartz (Paul Lukas), a suspicious brain surgeon from Czechoslovakia. Although he seems willing to help to find Miss Froy, it is obvious that he is actually doing the opposite. And he says that Iris, because of her slight concussion, may not be thinking clearly. "There is no Miss Froy, there never was a Miss Froy. Merely a very subjective image." Meanwhile, at the next train stop, a heavily bandaged patient on a stretcher is let aboard. Dr. Hartz says that he will operate on him at a hospital at the next train stop. Now a nun assists the patient. Iris becomes suspicious as she wears high heels. But the only one willing to help is Gilbert, who had earlier repulsed her with his hotel shenanigans. But Iris has nowhere else to turn. As our two heroes investigate, they become friendly with each other. They eventually discover that not only is Miss Froy aboard, but also is in danger. Will Iris remember Froy's name on the car window? Maybe Froy is indeed the patient on the stretcher! Here the situation, directed by the movie master, really begins to build tension. There are neat clues. The pace quickens. Note how the main characters react when they realize that they are in the middle of a menace. Is Doppo involved? The pseudo-nun? A German, Madame Kummer, malevolently looking in tweed, who appeared unexpectedly? Dr. Hartz? No spoilers will be given here, but there will be a train diversion and an exciting shootout. Caldicott and Charters may have a use after all.

    Alfred Hitchcock, in all of his quick-wittedness, has poised himself to begin making some of the greatest movies in world cinema history in the upcoming decades. By the way, near the end at the train station was the master himself with a cigarette in his mouth and a tiny lunch box in his left hand.
  • Imagine you're in a train, falling asleep and waking up to find out that your travelling companion has suddenly disappeared and none of the other passengers seems to recall his existence. Many times we're doubting our own certitudes, but what if we're sneakily lured into that doubt? How strong peer pressure can get to make us embrace a truth we hold for untrue?

    Hitchcock made many movies centering on conspiracies but they were all of political nature and we could identify both the villains and the implications of their lies. So do we in "The Lady Vanishes" but when even people who're obviously not part of the conspiracy have selfish reasons to deny the heroine's certitudes, you know you're dealing with cinematic treats only Chief Hitchcock can serve. Basically, he anticipates the plot-basis of "Gaslight" while transcending the classic "I swear it was here" cinematic trope.

    But "The Lady Vanishes" is also a pivotal moment in his career, it was its success, both critical (still considered one of his best) and commercial (at that time the most successful British film ever) that prompted Darryl O. Selznick to bring Hitchcock to the United States, firmly (and rightfully) believing that the director had a future in Hollywood. The rest is history, and the lighthearted but heavy-loaded train thriller was until the 70's Hitchcock' final British film.

    But did he know it?

    While it's very likely that he contemplated Hollywood conquest in 1938, he had barely conquered his countrymen. "Secret Agent" was forgettable, "Sabotage" was excellent but the story lived for the sake of its heart-pounding climax (that forged the director's reputation as a master of suspense) and "Young and Innocent" didn't have that level of sophisticated craftsmanship Hitchcock used to bring on-screen. These films were good, but inserted in a timeline starting with "39" and ending with "Vanishes", they could hardly be called high spots.

    But that makes the enthusiastic reception of the latter even more genuine and rewarding. Before quality, Hitchcock's prolificacy (one, sometimes two movies a year) was probably his best asset as he could never take a success for granted nor let a failure undermine his confidence. So, in 1938, he was finally given the right project, one with everything that could please the master starting with likable protagonists with motives of their own like in an Agatha Christie novel. Indeed, all these characters have their establishing moments in a first act that can work as a school case of exposition (and comedy).

    The film starts in a hotel in the kind of typical unnamed country that could have inspired Wes Anderson for his "Grand Budapest Hotel". An avalanche has blocked the railroad and customers are welcomed to stay for the night. The gallery of tourists is rather colorful, there are two British men, Caldicott and Charters, obviously obsessed with a cricket game they shall not miss by any chance, and are forced to share the servant's room, for some reason, their sharing the same bed was so incongruous for a 30s film it was hilarious.

    There's a group of three young socialites in a last tour over Europe, before their friend Iris (Margaret Lockwood) goes to London and marries some pre-arranged husband in London, there's Gilbert (a well-cast Flynn-like Michael Redgrave), a handsome expert in musicology who "plays musical chairs with elephants" at night, an anxious married man with his mistress and the lovable Mae Whitty as Mrs. Froy. She plays a retiring nurse going home to London and apparently eager to listen to a sweet ballad delivered in a serenade. So many things happen and so many are played for laughs that the potential plot devices or McGuffins might get overlooked, but they exist; you can bet on that.

    I think one of the mark of the great directors is that they make movies you want to watch twice, Hitchcock is even greater because he makes movies you've got to watch twice, not because they're complicated but because the delight is enhanced by the second viewing. There's a moment where the train whistles so loud a name must be written in the window, that detail will play a pivotal moment later. But then you'll notice Hitchcock's wicked sense of humor when it comes to the notions of appearing and vanishing. Hitchcock toys with our emotions in a rather claustrophobic and nightmarish situation where everything's against someone, yet sometimes, it's so desperate you've got to laugh.

    And Hitchcock seems to be in his territory when it comes to trains, like running metaphors of a plot heading to a destination, with villains likely to derail it or stop it. It also means that no one can leave it, so when you think about it, even the title has the right verb, creating a mystery within the mystery. It's not your "typical" detached thriller, Hitchcock even adds more density to his trademarks. Iris is a likable protagonist because she's not driven by a selfish motive, it's not about proving her innocence but rescuing a helpless person, actually, even villains are not deprived of human feelings.

    Speaking of villains, there's something interesting in the plot construction. When the revelation comes, the third act turns into a heart-pounding battle between fellow British men, all grouped in the restaurant at the time of tea, and foreigners. As a product of their time, Hitchcock movies from the 30s dealt with espionage and counter-espionage with worldwide war as a threat, but never has a historical value been so blatant and prophetic when one of the characters decided to wave a white flag, the Munich context and Churchill's quote about "dishonor and war" couldn't have had been a better illustration.

    "The Lady Vanishes" isn't just a wonderfully constructed thriller with fun screwball undertones, it's also a marker of talent and of time, and the best possible way for Hitchcock to end HIS time in Britain... but certainly not in the movies.
  • SilkTork22 February 2005
    One of the last films Hitchcock made before going to America, he was clearly already comfortable with making comedy thrillers involving an attractive male and female partnership.

    Nicely made and nicely judged though it is, The Lady Vanishes adds nothing much to the format that Hitchcock established with his ground-breaking and very modern 39 Steps from three years earlier. Indeed, there is much missing. The sexual tension, the energy, the driving wit, the sheer verve, the breathless pacing, the joy and arrogance of that earlier film are lacking here. It seems, at times, that Hitchcock is merely going through the paces. The greatest moments in The Lady Vanishes either involve Naughton Wayne and Basil Radford as the English caricatures Caldicott and Charters, or any of the minor supporting characters: the hotel manager, or the other passengers in the train carriage.

    This is a watchable and entertaining film, but if you are looking for an early Hitchcock classic then turn your attention to the much finer 39 Steps.
  • This classic espionage Hitchcock film is based on the novel ¨The wheel spins¨ by Ethel White . It concerns a woman caught in an intriguing thriller and being visually interesting and mostly involving , exciting and mysterious . A beautiful girl (Margaret Lockwood , though Vivien Leigh tested for the role that eventually went to Margaret) aboard the transcontinental express awakes from a nap to be aware herself that the elderly woman (a delightful Dame May Witty) seated near to her was abducted . After that , she meets a musician scholar (film debut of Michael Redgrave) eager to help her .Comedy! Chills! Chuckles! In a Mystery Express!.The Film That Made ALFRED HITCHCOCK Master of Suspense! Spies! Playing the game of love - and sudden death!

    The picture contains suspense , romance , tension , unlimited excitement and plenty of plot twists blended with brief doses of humor . A similar premise is subsequently repeated in ¨Foreign correspondent¨ (1940) but with a male role , an elderly diplomat with a dangerous secret . Besides , it has a literately witty dialog (writings credits by Frank Lauder and Sidney Gilliat) with the usual Hitch's characters , as the smart as well as elegant baddie , a brave , valiant woman and typically distinctive touches as a nun (Catherine Lacey film debut ) wearing high heels or the filming on a train , the vehicle preferred for the director and usually shot in scale model , maquette and transparency . The set in which the movie was shot on was only ninety feet long . Superb performances from main characters (a madcap heroine Margaret Lockwood and a brilliant Michael Redgrave) who develop a ¨screwball¨ relationship , and top-notch acting by supporting roles (particularly May Witty and Paul Lukas , Cecil Parker, Basil Sidney). Hitchcock's first real winner along with ¨39 steps¨ . Filmed in pre-war British time who Hitchcock called adventures period ; later on , he was contracted by David O'Selznick , as he goes to USA to make ¨Rebeca¨ , although his last British film was ¨Jamaica Inn¨ . Rating : Above average , having rave reviews by Orson Welles who reportedly saw this film eleven times and François Truffaut claimed this movie was his favorite Hitchcock and the best representation of Alfred Hitchcock's work . Reworked in 1979 by Anthony Page with Cybill Sheperd and Eliott Gould and Angela Lansbury as as the lady who disappears aboard a Swiss transcontinental express train.
  • drystyx7 February 2012
    Hitch's mystery about an elderly lady who vanishes on a train, and the cover up that mystifies a young woman, is a well done tale of old British charm.

    The film is more about British characters, and how they deal with an emergency, than a mystery.

    The obvious love interest is well done. The young man is no more annoying than usual. Indeed, a young man who isn't annoying is one who should be suspected of worse.

    The atmosphere for the film is one of the stuffy British men in bow ties in a foreign country. First, in a small inn. Second, in a train.

    This film shows us that the word "dated" is one used by those jealous of well done stories, because this is "story telling". It moves at a great pace, and never flounders. No dull moments. Something that modern movie directors could learn from. Possibly because we're given the story, without trying to sell fifty products for financial backers in each scene. It's simple and elegant.
  • 'The Lady Vanishes' is one of the last films made by Hitchcock before crossing the ocean and starting his American career. It used to be one of the preferred Hitchcock films of Francois Truffaut who confessed in his book of dialogs with Hitchcock to know it by heart. I had great expectations before seeing it, and I frankly was disappointing.

    The idea of the film is fantastic, and the film starts a genre or maybe two - the train (or other closed space) thriller and the denied disappearing where we the viewers and the hero are the only ones who believe in the reality of what we have seen - the combination that was lately used again in 'Fightplan'.

    The problem here is with the combination and ratio between comedy and thriller. The British humor mixed with national stereotypes that may have been enjoyed by the 1930s viewers did not work at all with me. The two principal characters played by Margaret Lockwood and Michael Redgrave are quite credible, and May Witty justifies the Dame put before her name, but the rest of the actors are no more that sketches filling in the screen with conventional and sometimes wooden acting. There is little thrill in the whole film especially after the secret of the disappearing is dispersed, there is none of the famous Hitchcock suspense scenes that we can remember, and the final action scenes look completely amateurish (what happened with the Nazi officer with a a gun with one bullet at hand in the train?).

    This film may have spoken actual messages by the time it was made. An appeasing lawyer is shot and killed while trying to surrender - a clear message for the contemporary audiences in England or the US a few weeks after the Munich agreement. Yet for the viewers today there is too little good cinema to keep beyond the truly original idea of the script.
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