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"The Spider and the Fly is set in Paris during the cloud-cuckoo days before WW I. The storyline intertwines the destinies of three people. Guy Rolfe plays Phillipe de Ledocq, a resourceful safecracker who always manages to elude arrest. Eric Portman is cast as police-chief Maubert, who will not rest until Ledocq is behind bars. And Nadia Gray is Madeleine, the woman beloved by both Ledocq and Maubert. Just as Maubert has managed to capture his man, Ledocq is released at the behest of the government, who wants him to steal secrets from the German embassy revealing the whereabouts of the Kaiser's secret agents. And just how does Madeleine figure into all of this? Spider and the Fly is a diverting precursor to the 1960s TV series It Takes a Thief." ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

Eric Portman as  Fernand Maubert
Guy Rolfe as  Philippe Lodocq
Nadia Gray as  Madeleine Saincaize
George Cole as  Marc, detective
Harold Lang as  Belfort, the pickpocket
Edward Chapman as  Minister for War
Maurice Denham as  Colonel de la Roche
May Hallatt as  Monique
Arthur Lowe as  Town Clerk
Sebastian Cabot as  Prefect

Reviews

robert-temple-1
1949/12/01

This is a slow-paced but solid film about a police inspector, played by the calm and unruffled Eric Portman (the spider) and his quarry, a master thief and safe cracker (the fly), who is played by Guy Rolfe. Rolfe was excellent in another film which he made this same year, PORTRAIT FROM LIFE (1949, see my review). He is just as good in this one as well, though playing a very different type of character, and one far less sympathetic. Robert Hamer directed this, one of only 14 films which he directed. He retired from the screen at age 49 and died at age 52, hence the small number of his films. He is best remembered for directing KIND HEARTS AND CORONETS (1949), this very same year, with Alec Guinness. The love interest in this story is played by the Romanian actress Nadia Gray, who has both men in her thrall but has a wild passion for Rolfe which at first he does not return. This was only her second film, the first being a French film in this same year which has never been reviewed on IMDb and may be lost, or at least lost to memory. Portman finally catches the elusive Rolfe and send him to prison, but then a wartime situation arises which requires a crucial document to be stolen from the safe of The German Legation in Switzerland. Portman recruits Rolfe for this task and the thief thus uses his safe-cracking and building-climbing skills to get the document and fight the Germans. It is a good film, well made, but somewhat slow. It would not have seemed so in 1949, perhaps, but things have speeded up now.

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robertino1954
1949/12/02

This is an unusual film from the highly-rated Robert Hamer containing two superb performances from Eric Portman and the statuesque Guy Rolfe. Rolfe is a revelation in that he is in no way overshadowed by Portman and his physical presence dominates his scenes. The script matches the performances and the locations, direction, lighting, and camera-work ensure is it wholly convincing throughout. Set in France just before and during the Great War, there are some truly tense and suspenseful scenes and the film holds you from start to finish. It is a picture which, because of its unusual atmosphere and setting, together with the performances and story-line, stays with you. The last two scenes are touching and beautifully played. Why more was not made of Guy Rolfe's talent and presence by giving him more prime roles in his career is a mystery to me. Try not to miss this one.

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whitec-3
1949/12/03

The Spider and The Fly (1949) appeared on Turner Classic Movies in a pre-dawn showing this November 2008. Having trouble sleeping, I met it halfway through and wished I'd recorded it entirely.The acting was splendid--the police inspector is a real pro, and Guy Rolfe as the master thief is attractively otherworldly. Like Bronson, McQueen, and Mitchum, Rolfe makes others wait for him to respond. The male leads develop a complex relationship: one pursues the other, they both love the same woman, then they need each other in the face of a common enemy.The supporting roles range in style from perfect British competence (the French minister of war) to dreamlike (the boy who helps the thief escape looks like a child version of the thief) to comedy (the lovestruck housemaid the thief gently seduces to gain access to a neighbor's window).The photography and sets are also dreamy, mostly shot by night, with long hallways down which the preternaturally tall thief moves, almost without one seeing him move.The plot features a quietly serious patriotic theme in which the thief regains the classic French status of citizen. That theme takes another unexpected step to end with a ground-level prophecy of tragedy. Not a great film, but well-made and at moments strangely lovely. I returned to bed and slept better.

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Bob Phillips
1949/12/04

A well cast and well paced police drama set in Paris just prior to WWI featuring Eric Portman as the professional and unemotional detective Fernand Maubert and his adversary the aristocratic gentleman thief and bank robber Philippe Lodocq played by the exceptionally tall Guy Rolfe. In some scenes I'm sure his lover, the demure Madeleine (Nadia Gray), is standing on something so as to kiss him. As the Hun approaches Paris, the French government tempts Philippe with a pardon and a wad of cash to do a little espionage. The film ends well with an unexpected twist. British film buffs should look out for a young George Cole (aka Arthur Daley)in the dual role as a trainee detective and actor. Also Arthur Lowe (Dad's Army) appears as a nervous town clerk. Note: This is not a film for those trying to quit smoking. In every scene every man smokes furiously and towards the end even the fair Madeleine lights up.

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