Sabotage
… A bomb plot … A killing … Justice
Out of Print:
Future availability is unknown
on most orders of $75+
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Brand New
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Also released as:
Sabotage
for $10.80
DVD Details
- Rated: Not Rated
- Run Time: 1 hours, 17 minutes
- Video: Black & White
- Encoding: Region 1 (USA & Canada)
- Released: July 9, 2015
- Originally Released: 1936
- Label: Reel Vault
Performers, Cast and Crew:
Starring | Sylvia Sidney, Oskar Homolka & John Loder | |
Performer: | Desmond Tester & Matthew Boulton | |
Directed by | Alfred Hitchcock | |
Edited by | Charles Frend | |
Screenwriting by | Charles Bennett | |
Produced by | Michael Balcon | |
Director of Photography: | Bernard Knowles |
Entertainment Reviews:
Rating: B --
Perhaps the best of the thrillers Alfred Hitchcock made in Britain before coming to the States.
Full Review
Ozus' World Movie Reviews
The individual genius of Hitchcock is very clearly shown in the distinctive and original direction.
Full Review
Monthly Film Bulletin
Rating: 4/5 --
Early Hitchcock soundie still stylish, still grabs
Kansas City Kansan
A finely handled English thriller about a London anarchist ring.
Full Review
Maclean's Magazine
Rating: B+ --
One of Hitchcock's best British thrillers, Sabotage contains a controversial sequence set on a bus that even the director was conflicted about.
Full Review
EmanuelLevy.Com
Rating: 4/5 --
We won't tell you what happens. That would be to cheat Mr. Hitchcock of his just reward, but it is a warning what you may expect -- which, as is the way of all Hitchcock melodramas, is the unexpected.
Full Review
New York Times
Sabotage is possibly Hitchcock's most viscerally effective pre-Hollywood film. And yet it is not remembered half as warmly as some of his other films from that period.
Full Review
The Young Folks
Product Description:
Based on Joseph Conrad's SECRET AGENT, this thriller is about a woman who suspects that her kindly husband may actually be a dangerous foreign agent. Hitchcock creates an atmosphere of claustrophobic fear while depicting a mysterious conspiracy to blow up Londoners in the places they gather. Behind the suspense premise, one can imagine Hitchcock enjoyed unfolding this story in front of his captive theater-bound audiences.