Still image from the 1939 film U-Boat 29.

U-Boat 29

Directed by Michael Powell

A German sub tries to sink the British fleet during World War I.

1939 1h 22m War TV-PG

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CAST
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Michael Powell, Director
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Michael Powell
Director

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Conrad Veidt, Captain Hardt
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Conrad Veidt
Captain Hardt

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Sebastian Shaw, [Lieutenant] Ashington
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Sebastian Shaw
[Lieutenant] Ashingto..

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Valerie Hobson, The school mistress
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Valerie Hobson
The school mistress

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Marius Goring, Schuster
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Marius Goring
Schuster

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June Duprez, Anne Burnett
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June Duprez
Anne Burnett

FULL SYNOPSIS

During World War I, Hardt, a German submarine captain, is sent to a secret rendezvous in the Orkney Islands near the home base of the British battle fleet. He has instructions to meet a spy there who will give him his orders. At the same time, Anne Burnett is proceeding to the islands to take a new position as schoolmistress and be near her fiancé, Reverend John Harris. On her way, she is kidnapped by German spies, and eventually a new schoolmistress appears and contacts Hardt. She gives him orders to sink the British fleet and tells him that specific instructions will be forthcoming from Lieutenant Ashington, a British traitor in the employ of the Germans. Soon after, the alcoholic Ashington arrives with a set of plans detailing the movements of the British battle cruisers. Hardt transmits these to his submarine crew, ordering them to torpedo the English fleet. Although he detests Ashington, Hardt finds himself attracted to the new spy, and consequently, when he sees her embracing Ashington, his jealousy is aroused. In actuality, the schoolmistress is Ashington's wife was pressed into emergency service as a counterspy after the true German spy was captured. When she becomes fearful of Hardt, Ashington smuggles his wife aboard the St. Magnus, a ferryboat transporting German prisoners of war. At the last moment, Hardt realizes that the girl and Ashington are actually counterspies and escapes aboard the St. Magnus. Inciting the prisoners to mutiny, Hardt commandeers the boat and tries to head off the submarine's deadly rendezvous. Hardt's own submarine, acting on his information, torpedoes the St. Magnus, and as the British destroyers shatter the submarine with depth bombs, Ashington's boat rescues all the passengers of the St. Magnus except Hardt, who goes down with the ship.


VIDEOS
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Dave Karger Intro
Hosted Intro
Do You Know Him By Sight?...
Movie Clip
A German Spy Would Give His H...
Movie Clip
A Traitor And A Drunkard...
Movie Clip
We'll Have To Take The Hearse...
Movie Clip
Ben Mankiewicz Intro...
Hosted Intro

ARTICLES
Michael Powell's The Spy in Black (1939) was the follow up to his breakthrough feature The Edge of the World (1937). It was the first film under Powell's brief contract with Alexander Korda's London Films, and it was also the start of his lengthy and productive partnership with the screenwriter Emeric Pressburger. Loosely based on the 1917 novel of the same title by the noted Orkney writer J. Storer Clouston, the plot concerns Captain Ernst Hardt (Conrad Veidt), a German spy who hides out in the town of Longhope, on the Orkney island of Hoy. There Hardt attempts to gain intelligence in order to sink the British naval fleet stationed at Scapa Flow. He is helped by a female agent (Valerie Hobson) posing as a schoolteacher, and Commander Blacklock (Sebastian Shaw), a disaffected British naval officer. The film was released in August 1939 in the U.K. and October of that year in the U.S. under the title U-Boat 29. In his autobiography entitled A Life in Movies (originally published 1986), Powell wrote that his first project with London Films was to have been a film entitled Burmese Silver, to be shot on location in Burma. Because of rising international tensions leading up to World War II and because of the project's cost, Burmese Silver was ultimately scrapped. In its place Korda offered Powell The Spy in Black, with a script already written and Conrad Veidt and Valerie Hobson cast in the lead roles. Powell disliked the original script, which he felt was a too-literal adap...

NOTES

According to contemporary reviews, this picture, released as The Spy in Black in England, was the second of Columbia's "quota acquisitions," which were produced by Irving Asher, the head of Columbia British production. It was produced just before the start of World War II, and marked the first collaboration of Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger. The film appeared on the National Board of Review's "ten best" list of 1939. Modern sources add Bernard Miles to the cast. Powell and Pressburger re-teamed with Valerie Hobson in the 1939 British film Contraband which released released in the United States in 1940 as Blackout.

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