Adventure in Diamonds explained

Adventure in Diamonds
Director:George Fitzmaurice
Producer:A.M. Botsford
William LeBaron
Starring:George Brent
Isa Miranda
John Loder
Nigel Bruce
Music:Charles Bradshaw
Sigmund Krumgold
Cinematography:Charles Lang
Editing:LeRoy Stone
Studio:Paramount Pictures
Distributor:Paramount Pictures
Runtime:76 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English

Adventure in Diamonds is a 1940 American crime film directed by George Fitzmaurice and starring George Brent, Isa Miranda, John Loder and Nigel Bruce.[1] It was also released under the alternative title of Diamonds are Dangerous.

Critics noted similarities in the plot with Desire (1936), produced by the same studio, which had starred Marlene Dietrich. Adventure in Diamonds was part of an attempt to position Miranda as a European star in the style of Dietrich and Greta Garbo.[2] It was the second of two Hollywood films in which Miranda appeared before returning to her native Italy.[3]

Plot

Captain Stephen Dennett of the Royal Air Force is aboard a passenger airliner flying to South Africa, when he meets the beautiful and glamorous Felice Falcon. He is unaware that Felice is an accomplished jewel thief traveling with her partner in crime Michael Barclay. They are planning a heist in the South African mines in which they will steal a shipment of diamonds and escape unnoticed. The diamonds are already cached by one of Felice’s accomplices, but she needs a way to enter the restricted mine area without raising suspicion. Felice schemes to use Stephen for the plot, using her charm to persuade him to permit her entry to the forbidden area because of his status as a military officer.

However, Stephen is not fooled and takes possession of the stolen jewels himself. He tries to frame the two thieves and contacts his acquaintance, the police commissioner Colonel J.W. Lansfield. Stephen surrenders the jewels to Lansfield, who has pursuing Barclay for a long time, and he sets a trap with the jewels. However, the plan backfires, and Felice is caught in the trap instead of Barclay. She is sentenced to prison but is offered a parole by Lansfield if she agrees to help catch a new ring of jewel thieves operating in the area. She is to pretend to be Stephen’s new wife, and they are supposed to deliver the stolen jewels to the new gang.

While they wait to be contacted by the gang, Felice and Stephen spend some quality time together, and Felice falls truly in love with Stephen. She renounces her criminal past in order to start anew. The gang eventually makes contact and their leader is revealed to be Felice’s old accomplice Barclay, causing Felice and Stephen's cover to be exposed. However, they are rescued by the Lansfield and his men.[4]

Cast

Reception

In a contemporary review for The New York Times, critic B. R. Crisler called the film "a crackling good second-rate melodrama" and wrote: "The world may never see a gem-lifter who is as glamorous as Isa Miranda and still has to go to the South African mines for diamonds, or a hero who is completely honest and yet as fascinatingly urbane as George Brent ... But making an honest livelihood is dull enough; we insist that diamond-stealing, at least, shall be amusing and brilliantly peopled."[5]

References

  1. Web site: BFI | Film & TV Database | ADVENTURE IN DIAMONDS (1940) . Ftvdb.bfi.org.uk . 2009-04-16 . 2011-11-02 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121018231514/http://ftvdb.bfi.org.uk/sift/title/65626 . 2012-10-18 . dead .
  2. Gundle p.143
  3. Gundle p.144
  4. Web site: Adventure in Diamonds.
  5. News: Crisler . B. R. . 1940-04-04 . The Screen: 'Adventure in Diamonds,' a Melodrama Involving Crooks and Jewels, Comes to Loew's Criterion . . 27.

Bibliography