Lisa (1962) Poster

(1962)

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8/10
If Anne Frank had lived...
Irie2127 August 2009
Warning: Spoilers
It all starts in Amsterdam, in fact, not far from the Frank House. Though it is a slow-moving film, the pace only helps suggest the parallel between a Holocaust survivor's flight to Palestine and the Biblical exodus to the Promised Land. What's more, the slow pace allows generous, revelatory location shoots in London, Tangiers, the open Mediterranean, and for half the film, when Leo McKern is at the helm of a barge, the Netherlands.

Dolores Hart brings a rare combination of peachy youth and steely determination to the eponymous role Lisa, the Jewish survivor. And Stephen Boyd proves himself a capable actor at last as the alternate eponym, The Inspector. Many other roles are so brief that they're virtual cameos-- but played by superb British character actors who keep the action lively and entertaining. Particularly wonderful: Hugh Griffith, who seems to have given up bathing entirely for his role as a smuggler beset by bats in his Moroccan apartment.

There are time-line problems. The film is set some time between October 1945 and summer 1946, during the Nuremberg trials, which are referred to. But the most powerful scenes are Auschwitz flashbacks, and at one point, Lisa describes the liberation. As she stumbles past barbed wire, she sees a tank with a Star of David painted on it: "The only Israeli tank in the Allied Army—and I saw it!" She then adds, "Sometimes I don't believe it myself" — a wise bit of dialog because Lisa's memory is surely false. Auschwitz was liberated in January, 1945, but by Soviet troops, while the Jewish Brigade (which did indeed fight under the Zionist symbol) was part of the British Army. Furthermore, Israel wasn't a nation until 1948, and the word "Israeli" wasn't in use before then.

But that is a mere quibble. An even more powerful flashback— which is both believable and almost unbearable-- takes us to the Auschwitz clinics where, as Lisa says, "They used us for anatomy lessons, like cadavers"-- a statement which is all too historically accurate.

It's not on DVD yet; watch for it on Fox Movie Channel; that's where I found it.
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8/10
Unforgettable
Danusha_Goska16 May 2010
Warning: Spoilers
I saw "Lisa" exactly one time, many decades ago, when I was a kid. I watched it on a black and white TV, late at night, interrupted by many annoying commercials. I've never forgotten "Lisa": Dolores Hart played a Holocaust survivor determined, by any means necessary, to get to Palestine at a time when the British were interdicting such arrivals. Ruggedly handsome Stephen Boyd was Inspector Jongman. He began by hindering Lisa's pilgrimage and ended up helping her. For comic relief, there was Hugh Griffith, a smuggler who used a tennis racket in his ongoing battle with the bats that invaded his exotic Tangiers apartment at dusk.

Most importantly, I never shook the feeling that the film aroused in me – this film literally made me sick, and terrified, but it also moved and inspired me.

In the intervening years, I read somewhere that "Lisa" was an early attempt to depict the Holocaust in a mainstream Hollywood movie. That just increased my curiosity. Some kind soul has finally posted "Lisa" on youtube and I watched it there.

The title sequence appears over train tracks, rushing rapidly beneath the camera. This allusion to trains rushing to concentration camps felt heavy-handed. The film opens in 1946. Lisa is the pouty, passive cargo of a Nazi white slaver. There's some implausible cloak and dagger stuff – the daggers are SS, engraved "blood and honor" – and for sale by the Nazi white slaver, a villain with obviously dyed blonde hair and an obviously fake German accent. The Nazi dies; Lisa escapes via a fire escape; investigators suspect that Inspector Jongman murdered the Nazi. The chase / road movie is on. Lisa and Jongman begin a cat-and-mouse odyssey, via Dutch canal barge and smuggler ship, to Palestine.

After my decades-long wait to see "Lisa" again, these opening scenes disappointed me. I thought, "Gee, we've come a long way since 1962. This ain't no "Schindler's List." Lisa is merely an object. The Nazi controls her; the good Dutch man wants her. She volunteered to go with the Nazi, stupidly falling for his lie that he would smuggle her to Palestine. And Lisa is obviously NOT Jewish. Dolores Hart was famously Catholic; she's got bright blue eyes and blond hair. English, Irish, and American actors try, or don't, to speak with slipping and sliding Dutch, German, or Arabic accents.

Lisa is a survivor of medical experimentation at Auschwitz. She had been used "like a cadaver" in gynecological training. Jongman wants to help Lisa because he had failed to help Rachel, his Jewish fiancée. The Holocaust is translated from genocide into a titillating morals charge or the plot twist in a risqué romance novel. Though the center of this crime against women is a woman, Lisa, the film is really all about the men around her: Jongman, the Nazi, the police chasing them, the colorful smugglers aiding them, exploiting them, or ripping them off.

I kept watching, though, and in spite of all the problems, I rediscovered the movie that had so moved me years ago. Lisa's blondeness adds to the horror, in the same way that Jeanne Crain's whiteness added to the impact of "Pinky." Casting a white woman as a victim of Jim Crow, or a Catholic as a Jew, emphasizes that there is no logic nor justice to racism. We humans really ARE one race, and none of us can rely on our putative racial identity, or our physical features, for immunity.

As Bowsley Crowther pointed out in his New York Times review, the film's "lurid" advertisements are not representational of the film's "decent" and "asexual" content. In any case, Lisa's intimate victimization, and her literal sterility, economically and powerfully communicate the Nazis' sadism and nihilism.

There is a scene in this movie that I have never forgotten. Though, in the intervening years, I've seen too much graphic violence, I was afraid to re-watch this scene. Lisa describes how she was used as a medical display. In her flashback, all you see is what Lisa saw: the overheard medical lamps, and doctors' eyes staring at her clinically, as if she were, indeed, a cadaver. Lisa concludes her flashback by saying, "I wanted to say to them, we are people, we are human beings." The scene includes no special effects. It is one of the most high-impact Holocaust scenes, or depictions of dehumanization, that I've ever seen.

Lisa has been betrayed by the world. She survives by telling herself that Palestine is that somewhere-over-the-rainbow that can restore her will to live. Her goal and her intensity are palpable, both poignant and steely.

Dolores Hart is something to behold. She radiates rare beauty and depth. She and Boyd develop genuine chemistry; you come to care about their fate. Robert Stephens, in a small part as an Englishman who is, alternately, oafish, cloying, threatening, and moving, punctuates the final act of the film. There is an ideological smuggler, Brown, who wants to use Lisa to his own purposes; this subplot underlines how sometimes the highest ideals can inspire exploitative behavior. The theme of noble sacrifice is believable and moving.

"Lisa" is based on Jan de Hartog's novel. He was the son of a Dutch minister and a convert to Quakerism. As a child he ran away, and lived on barges. During the war he aided in the hiding of Jewish babies; he hid from the Nazis disguised as a woman. Dolores Hart, who plays Lisa, left Hollywood at the height of her career to become a cloistered nun.
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7/10
An unwanted guest
bkoganbing13 November 2018
Dolores Hart heads a cast of mostly British players in The Inspector, a film about a Dutch Jewish refugee determined to get to Palestine. Her's is a tightly controlled performance of a woman for whom every kind of emotion has been drained out of her. But she wants more than life itself to live in a Jewish homeland, a place where she doesn't feel like an unwanted guest.

Stephen Boyd plays a Dutch police inspector who covers up the fact that she killed a white slaver looking to pimp out her sexual services. Boyd and Hart are kept under a loose surveillance by British intelligence as many try to help them in their quest.

As we know the politics of oil kept the British who occupied Palestine tilting toward the Arabs. But for many, humanity dictated otherwise.

A nice cast was put together in support of Boyd and Hart and standing out are Leo McKern as a gruff Dutch barge captain, Donald Pleasence as a surveilling policeman and Hugh Griffith as a gunrunner.

For the leads this is some of the best work they do in their interrupted careers, Boyd by an early death and Hart by retiring from acting to go into a convent where she still is a mother/prioress.

Exodus was an epic tale of the founding of Israel. The Inspector reduces the story to an inspiring singularity.
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Wonderful Stephen Boyd performance
leopardgirl991 April 2004
This is one of my favorite movies by the actor. Definitely not a miscast and great acting. Also a great story but maybe you would have to be first generation WW II dependent and from Holland to appreciate it's value. The novel by Jan De Hartog is extremely accurate of what went on in post war Europe and I loved this movie. Highly recommend it. Great scenery and tells the tale of the displacement of Holocaust victims as well. This movie did give him another nomination for the Golden Globes and rightly so.
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7/10
Good movie, dumbest dog in history
benovite26 January 2009
Saw this on FMC recently. It's a good movie, very moving, a bit over-dramatic but the story makes up for it. Great production values, good music, wonderful scenery courtesy of Holland. I loved seeing Amsterdam in the early 60's because I was there in 2005- and apparently much hasn't changed in the interim! OK so the dog. Holland is the only country to have a national dog. I learned that from a snapple cap. The national dog(the name escapes me) is the dog that are on the barges, kind of like captain's mates. I learned from this movie that they're very useful when navigating in the fog because they bark and the other barge dogs bark as well so they can tell how far they are.

So why is the barge dog in this movie the dumbest dog? Because the captain/owner is a smuggler, yet when police/inspectors board his barge the dog almost immediately sniffs out the stash area where the illegal stuff is AND on top of that goes to the trouble of opening the stash area for the police for them to see. Wow.

Other than that good movie, you may like the dog and his funny ways. He's probably a narc. ARF!
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7/10
The promised land.
ulicknormanowen9 September 2020
"The inspector" is a bad title for it suggests a detective story ,which it is not; only the beginning will make you think of a routine thriller ;but the murder (or accident ,who cares anyway?) is quickly forgotten .The alternate title "Lisa" is much more adequate .

This is some kind of Otto Preminger's "Exodus" (1960) in miniature ; a Dutch cop, who feels guilt because he did nothing to save a deported during WW2 (many people ,in occupied Europa looked the other way when there were Jews round -ups ;see the Vel' D'Hiv round-up in Paris ,with the help of the French police ).

Deaf to the disapproval of his family who wants to prevent him from doing such a foolish thing , the man decides to help a young Jewish girl to get to Palestine .It will be a long way ,full of pitfalls , from Amsterdam via Paris and Morroco to the promised land ; all along the way ,colorful characters (the owner of the barge) and people who claim to help them but actually want the girl to testify in Nuremberg.The scene when Lisa depicts the horror of the concentration camps (all these eyes staring at her naked body) is not unlike Sal Mineo 's questioning in "Exodus" when he shouts :"they treated me like a woman!"or Montgomery Clift 's only scene in "judgement in Nuremberg ".

There are gaps in the screenplay ,but the story remains absorbing till the last picture : like Eva -Marie Saint in "Exodus" , Boyd seems to have embraced a cause that was not his.
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9/10
Haunting, suspenseful
phansiet21 July 2000
I saw this film as a young girl in the sixties and never forgot it. One of the great pluses in this film is the very deep cast of English character actors who parade through the story. Not the least of which is Donald Pleasence. I consider this film the first to bear the, Donald Pleasence is in it, it must be good, rule. You know, that seal of approval that M.Emmet Walsh and later J.T. Walsh brought to their work.

I consider this to be Stephen Boyd's best work, and indicative of the career he could have had, had he not been saddled with the "too good looking for his own good" curse that ruined the aspirations of a lot of actors doomed to play shallow roles. As for Delores Hart's final screen performance, goodness only knows what she could have accomplished had she not committed her life to God. One of the great show biz what ifs. But the real star of this movie is the story, with its brutal for its time period, depiction of refugees problems in a post war Europe. Attempting to start anew while unable to escape the horrors of her war time experiences, Lisa is an unwanted and painful reminder of a society that wishes to move on but can't agree on how to handle the problems of thousands of extraneous displaced victims. And how this film refuses to sugar coat the ending, leaving its characters with choices that can only be described as excruciatingly heartbraking and yet uplifting at the same time. The post war experience in Europe was no picnic for the victims or the guilt ridden bystanders. This film will haunt you.
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10/10
Aching personal story of the effects of the holocaust
overseer-318 July 1999
This is a haunting, yet little-known film, beautifully acted, that shows the after-effects of Nazi concentration camp sterilization and torture on a young Jewish girl, as she tries to escape to Palestine after the war. The budding romance between the principal actors adds an extra poignancy to the tale, as they are separated in the dramatic and unforgettable ending. I only wish this film were on video, so that a new audience of young people could learn and benefit from its story.
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5/10
The Inspector
EdgarST29 December 2014
Changing the title from the original "The Inspector" to "Lisa" for American release somehow misses the point, since it changes focus from Dutch police inspector Peter Jongman (Stephen Boyd) and the task he accomplishes as to appease his remorse for what he did not do for his girlfriend Rachel when seized by the Nazis: to give a helping hand. Drama is action, and action means change and it is Jongman who goes through a stronger process of transformation during the film narration, and in the end he is a different man.

Jongman finds the object of his mission in Lisa Held (Dolores Hart in one of her last film roles), an abused Jewish girl that was a prisoner in Auschwitz, lost all her relatives and wants to go to Palestine to find a cure to her mental wounds and a sense to all what happened to her. Neither character is quite original in the history of films: we have seen several stories about Jewish women traumatized by war and concentration camps like Lisa, and men like Jongman, in search of expiation. But Jongman goes to an unusual extent of his professional duty to make him an attractive character, under a light that somehow makes him different.

The material taken from a novel by Dutch writer Jan de Hartog was a good basis for what could have been a better drama. Instead, in the hands of veteran Hollywood professional Philip Dune, the film drags the load of sentimental melodrama (not helped a bit by Malcolm Arnold's omnipresent score). By 1962 standards this was what the French critics disdainfully called "cinéma de papa" (or "Dad's cinema"), an old fashioned formula that in the case of literary adaptations turned the motion picture into a vehicle of the "filmable" aspects of the books. This is most evident when the action moves from Europe to the city of Tangier in North Africa, including cardboard scenes with smuggler Karl van der Pink (Hugh Griffith) in a flat with a big window that shows mockups of the city, and where the man is attacked by special-effects bats.

I guess that what affected me the most when I finally watched "The Inspector" (52 years after its release) was the fact that I had read so many good comments about it and found out they were romanticized visions of the motion picture and one more rumination of the Jewish drama (as the change of title suggests). Still the chemistry of Boyd and Hart is essential to keep us interested, backed by the usual good cast of British actors, also including Leo McKern, Donald Pleasence, Robert Stephens and Finlay Currie.
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10/10
Powerful
joandaniels24 October 2002
Lisa is a powerful drama about a German concentration camp refugee, played by Dolores Hart, trying to get to Israel to begin a new life after the war, and the Dutch Police Inspector, played by Stephen Boyd, who decides to help her. The story is gripping and intense and the performances are superb. Both Stephen Boyd and Dolores Hart turn in one of the finest performances of their careers and so does the all-star supporting cast, including Donald Pleasance and Hugh Griffith. Wonderful film for a rainy day afternoon.
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5/10
The Inspector- There is A Certain Void Here **
edwagreen21 July 2009
Warning: Spoilers
This is probably the weakest of all the excellent films that have been made dealing with the holocaust.

While we realize that Dolores Hart's part is one of terror having survived Auschwitz, there is a certain emptiness that she displays here that is hard to comprehend.

I wonder how Boyd felt doing another film with Hugh Griffith. Remember, three years before, Griffith won the best supporting actor Oscar for Ben-Hur. Unbelievable that Boyd wasn't even nominated as Massala in that category. Griffith essentially had a similar role in Exodus, two years before this film, as a smuggler of human cargo.

The film becomes somewhat muddled at the end as you don't realize who the good or bad guys are. Of course, the British come off here as the bad-guys which they deserved.
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10/10
Memorable, Very Poignant Film
ru-reel18 June 2009
I saw this movie many years ago, when I was in my teens, and then again when I was in my 20s. I haven't found it since. It was very moving to me at the time, partly because I really loved Delores Hart and Stephen Boyd. Alas, Steven Boyd died young, and never got the credit he was due as an actor while he was alive. And - alas again - Delores Hart's career was quite short because she left Hollywood at a young age and entered the convent.

This is an unusual love story between a Dutch detective/police officer, and a young Jewish woman who is more or less stranded in Holland after the war. The detective is emotionally moved by the plight of this young women, and decides to help her get to Palestine. The rest of the movie revolves around their difficult and event-filled journey.

Both Hart and Boyd are wonderful in their roles, and Hart's plight, and Boyd's emotional response and caring for her, are very moving. I believe that Boyd's character represents the European, non-Jews who went out of their way to help Jews during, and after WW II. But his feelings of caring for her, and his response to her particular story (I won't go into detail here about her tragic circumstances) go beyond guilt and just wanting to help. He is very drawn to her, and eventually, she is to him as well.

Anyway, well worth seeing this emotional and atmospheric film. the film is from a book by the writer Jan de Hartog, and it is a very original, unusual story.
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5/10
A badly miscast Stephen Boyd badly undermines film's poignancy
aromatic-27 March 2000
Some excellent supporting performances and poignant situations and magnificent cinematography are undermined by the miscasting of Boyd in the pivotal central character. He undermines the film's credibility and even its pacing. This is a shame because some of the supporting performances and location shooting are truly remarkable.
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10/10
A Love Story
dummysenders15 January 2014
I watched it during my mid-teen years (circa 1980); I'm male. Fortunately, I didn't suffer the burdens some of these other reviewers suffered when they viewed it, such as knowing one of the actresses was notoriously Catholic or paying attention to her fair complexion such that I couldn't accept her character as Jewish. I try my best to remain ignorant of these sorts of things so that I have the best chance possible of appreciating a quality movie for what it is. It was probably my first time seeing any of the actors, so I wasn't comparing their performances to their prior and subsequent performances, or wondering why they didn't earn an award nomination for this role when they earned one for some other. Nor did I didn't make note of historical inaccuracies during the movie, as though I expected a documentary. I simply sat down and watched a movie, hoping to be transported--and I was.

This is a love story, first, second, and foremost. It is so in a deep, subtle, convoluted way, however, as opposed to explicitly/passionately/upliftingly so--a love that is fought and denied, inwardly and outwardly, for a variety of reasons, some of which are quite somber. If you don't appreciate that sort of thing or aren't in the mood for it, then I wouldn't be surprised if you rated this movie somewhere between 6 and 8. The suspenseful storyline serves as powerful enrichment to the love story, not as brilliant portrayal of the historical, political, and moral issues involved. If you can appreciate subtle romantic love stories that are devoid of explicit expressions of passion and set in darkness, curl up some emotive evening with a sensitive significant other, and I think you will enjoy it immensely.
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10/10
Dutch detective helps girl to get to Israel @end of WW2.
flyam2 March 2006
I think this might have been Hart's last film prior to her entering the Convent. She had been a young Jewish girl sent to one of the camps. The war was winding down and she was able to get away from the Nazis. Well some how or other she met this Dutch detective and he promised to help her. It was a very well acted movie and I cannot say much more as it would constitute a spoiler practically in scene by scene. I am disappointed not to find Lisa on any movie channels and the same applies to stores selling movies. It was a poignant rendering what I presume many people I have been come in contact with for the last 4 years. Lee
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10/10
Deep Dark Film
whpratt111 February 2009
Warning: Spoilers
This is a great story along with outstanding actors who show the struggles of a young woman who is running far away from her past in Holland and the treatment she received from the Nazi experimental doctors.

This young girl captures the eye of a British policemen who understands she wants to go to Palestine and live and is having a hard time trying to secure passage which is very expensive. The policeman agrees to stay with her until she reaches her destination.

This couple encounter all kinds of crooks and some very good hearted people who are willing to help them secure passage to Palestine.

This man and woman begin to fall in love but the woman does not want any physical contact with the man and tells him we can never get married.

Good story and worth viewing over and over as a reminder of a horrible past that happened to the Jewish nation and other countries.
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10/10
Dolores Hart's best work
yimaidh16 December 2023
Holland, 1946. Dutch police inspector Peter Jongman has been tormented by remorse ever since he left his Jewish fiancée in a Nazi POW camp during the war. He followed Lisa Held, a young girl kidnapped by slaver, to London to rescue her at all costs, only to discover that she had been held at Auschwitz. When Peter hears of Lisa's desire to go to Palestine, he decides to make it happen. During their escapade, Peter becomes attracted to Lisa. However, Lisa showed him a cold attitude. She was forced to undergo sterilization at Auschwitz because she thought she did not deserve to be a married woman... My favorite scene. "Peter: You also know I've fallen in love with you. Lisa: Don't, Peter.

Peter: I'm trying to be objective about it. You still despise me a little, don't you?

Lisa: That's not true. I think you're a wonderful man. Everything you've done for me, kind of person you are.

Peter: But you don't love me. Lisa: Don't make me answer that. Please don't. It's not what you think, it is it's not that at all. Peter: Tell me one thing, Lisa. Is there any hope for me?

Lisa: No. No hope. " Dolores Hart is truly beautiful. She gives a passionate performance.
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