5/10
And So They Were Married
5 October 2019
Karin Dor marries wealthy Hellmut Lange, but all is not sunny. Her uncle and friends assume she married him for money, of course. At the same time as the marriage Little do they know that he is worried that his father's madness will descend upon him! At the same time, fake bank bills made by "the Forger of London" start showing up, and all the clues point to Mr. Lange. Why then, is Chief Inspector Siegfried Lowitz helping Miss Dor destroy evidence? Could he be part of the forgery ring?

It's one of the Edgar Wallace mysteries shot in Germany. You can tell. Not only is the English dialogue inexpertly looped, but the players move nothing at all like English people. Of course, bad voicework on foreign movies is a hallmark of cheap foreign productions. Anyone who has not noticed that most of the men in Italian peplum movies sound sound like Paul Frees has not been paying attention. Still, it is easy to accept that people in ancient Greece moved like the actors in those movies, because we have no other standards to judge by. 20th-Century Englishmen are another matter, at least when it comes to movie actors, and there's a clear difference in the physical performances.

Still, it's a nicely convoluted murder mystery that appears to be going nowhere for a while, until the answer pops out at you and you realize that, yes, it has been more than adequately foreshadowed. That's something.
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