Directed by Richard Thorpe; produced by Victor Saville
Professor Richard Myles (Fred MacMurray) and his new bride, Frances (Joan Crawford), are about to depart on their honeymoon when they are waylaid by an old friend of Richard’s. Peter Galt (Richard Ainley) works ‘sort of’ for the Foreign Office, and asks the couple to take their honeymoon in Germany, so they can try to contact an acquaintance of Galt’s who has gone missing. Rather excited by joining what they correctly assume to be a Secret Service operation, the Myleses soon find themselves in sinister surroundings, caught up in disguises, false identities, secret formulae - and murder.
Above Suspicion has all the parts to make an enjoyable light, espionage caper film. It has highly capable actors, decent direction, a good pace. Yet, while it is certainly watchable, it is curiously uninvolving and forgettable.
The players do well. MacMurray is a good leading man and Crawford matches him. They admirably portray a couple who are caught up in what they see as the fun of an adventure, with secret meetings, hidden clues and the such, only to be confronted with rather more seriousness than they expected. If their chemistry isn’t perfect, it is good enough. Others of the cast are successful in their parts, too, including Conrad Veidt as a jovial Austrian tour guide, Basil Rathbone as an aristocratic old friend of Richard’s, and Bruce Lester as a neurotic Englishman on the verge of a breakdown.
The direction also works, though not quite as well. Thorpe doesn’t really capitalize on what should have been a fun atmosphere at the start of the film, though he makes up for it with good pacing later on. He also manages to convey the settings, which are both urban and rural.
The script and the story are the culprits, I think. From a novel by Helen Innes, the story is more convoluted that it should or need be. If one gets lost in the explanation of the mission, things probably aren’t going to be clearer later. There is a man to be located (identity unknown), who will lead the Myleses to another man (identity equally unknown), who will lead them to who they must find.
Once in Austria (by then a part of Germany), the pair is directed from one place to another through clues hidden books, maps, songs and flowers. We meet a Briton who may be part of an espionage operation, but seems bent on his own mission. And when the Myleses at last find what they were sent to retrieve, it’s an afterthought. Far too complicated, Above Suspicion’s script doesn’t make things clear for the viewer, and provides clues that no one outside of fiction would believe are meaningful. For example, three pin-prick holes in a map in the back of a book are almost immediately deduced as indicating page three in that book.
Aside from the pointlessly complex story, the script does not provide much in the way of interesting or clever dialogue, which would have helped tremendously. Though the characters MacMurray and Crawford play are likeable, they are hardly Nick and Nora Charles.
A light and inconsequential movie, Above Suspicion will entertain for its duration, but won’t be memorable enough to last long after that.