Alan Curtis – Cinema of the World https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st Thu, 08 Jan 2026 13:33:52 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/cropped-Vintage-Movie-Camera-Icon-32x32.png Alan Curtis – Cinema of the World https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st 32 32 Raoul Walsh – High Sierra (1941) (HD) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2025/06/raoul-walsh-high-sierra-1941-hd/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2025/06/raoul-walsh-high-sierra-1941-hd/#respond Mon, 09 Jun 2025 06:09:00 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=247460 Synopsis: After being released from prison, notorious thief Roy Earle is hired by his old boss to help a group of inexperienced criminals plan and carry out the robbery of a California resort. High.Sierra.1941.1080p.BluRay.FLAC1.0.x264-Slope.mkvGeneralContainer: MatroskaRuntime: 1 h 39 minSize: 13.7 GiBVideoCodec: x264Resolution: 1480x1080 Aspect ratio: 1.370Frame rate: 23.976 fpsBit rate: 19.3 Mb/sBPP: 0.503Audio#1: English 1.0ch …

The post Raoul Walsh – High Sierra (1941) (HD) first appeared on Cinema of the World.

]]>

Synopsis:
After being released from prison, notorious thief Roy Earle is hired by his old boss to help a group of inexperienced criminals plan and carry out the robbery of a California resort.



High.Sierra.1941.1080p.BluRay.FLAC1.0.x264-Slope.mkv

General
Container: Matroska
Runtime: 1 h 39 min
Size: 13.7 GiB
Video
Codec: x264
Resolution: 1480x1080
Aspect ratio: 1.370
Frame rate: 23.976 fps
Bit rate: 19.3 Mb/s
BPP: 0.503
Audio
#1: English 1.0ch FLAC @ 272 kb/s

https://nitro.download/view/BA24E8D8908C351/High.Sierra.1941.1080p.BluRay.FLAC1.0.x264-Slope.mkv

Language(s):English
Subtitles:English, English [SDH], French, Polish, Portuguese, Slovenian, Swedish, Turkish, Hungarian, Icelandic, Italian, Czech, Danish, Finnish, Greek, Hebrew, German, Spanish

The post Raoul Walsh – High Sierra (1941) (HD) first appeared on Cinema of the World.

]]>
https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2025/06/raoul-walsh-high-sierra-1941-hd/feed/ 0
Josef von Sternberg – Sergeant Madden (1939) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2024/02/sergeant-madden-1939/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2024/02/sergeant-madden-1939/#comments Wed, 14 Feb 2024 04:32:00 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=216866 Sergeant Madden (1939) A highly respected Irish cop is pleased when his son follows him onto the force. Unfortunately, the son is more interested in rewards than in upholding the law. When he shoots a child caught stealing, the others frame him and he is sent to prison where his attitude becomes even worse than …

The post Josef von Sternberg – Sergeant Madden (1939) first appeared on Cinema of the World.

]]>
Sergeant Madden (1939)
Sergeant Madden (1939)

A highly respected Irish cop is pleased when his son follows him onto the force. Unfortunately, the son is more interested in rewards than in upholding the law. When he shoots a child caught stealing, the others frame him and he is sent to prison where his attitude becomes even worse than before.

Sergeant Madden (1939)
Sergeant Madden (1939)
Sergeant Madden (1939)
Sergeant.Madden.1939.Josef.von.Sternberg-KG.avi

General
Container:	AVI
Runtime:	1h 20mn
Size:	1.09 GiB
Video
Codec:	XviD
Resolution:	640x480
Aspect ratio:	4:3
Frame rate:	23.976 fps
Bit rate:	1 841 Kbps
Audio
1.0ch MP3 @ 96.0 Kbps

https://nitro.download/view/EFB879719B10303/Sergeant.Madden.1939.Josef.von.Sternberg-KG.avi

Language(s):English
Subtitles:None

The post Josef von Sternberg – Sergeant Madden (1939) first appeared on Cinema of the World.

]]>
https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2024/02/sergeant-madden-1939/feed/ 2
Douglas Sirk – Hitler’s Madman (1943) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2024/01/hitlers-madman-1943/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2024/01/hitlers-madman-1943/#respond Wed, 17 Jan 2024 23:48:55 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=214344 Hitler’s Madman (1943) Synopsis:Somewhat fictionalized account of the destruction of the village of Lidice in Czechoslovakia and the events leading up to it. In 1942, the Allies parachuted a Czech resistance fighter into the area. He quickly reunites with his former girlfriend and many of the villagers who knew him from before the war. The …

The post Douglas Sirk – Hitler’s Madman (1943) first appeared on Cinema of the World.

]]>
Hitler's Madman (1943)
Hitler’s Madman (1943)

Synopsis:
Somewhat fictionalized account of the destruction of the village of Lidice in Czechoslovakia and the events leading up to it. In 1942, the Allies parachuted a Czech resistance fighter into the area. He quickly reunites with his former girlfriend and many of the villagers who knew him from before the war. The Nazis are evil however and under the command of Reinhardt Heydrich rule the country with an iron fist, arbitrarily arresting innocents and charging them with fictitious crimes. When Heydrich is severely wounded in a roadside attack – he dies three days later – Henrich Himmler orders the destruction of Lidice. The men are herded into a church which is set aflame and the women are sent to concentration camps. The town itself is leveled.

Hitler's Madman (1943)
Hitler's Madman (1943)
Hitler's Madman (1943)
Hitler's.Madman.1943.DVDRip.x264-HANDJOB.mkv

General
Container:  	Matroska
Runtime: 	1 h 24 min
Size: 	1.49 GiB
Video
Codec: 	x264
Resolution: 	720x480 ~> 720x540
Aspect ratio:  	4:3
Frame rate: 	23.976 fps
Bit rate: 	2 301 kb/s
BPP: 	0.278
Audio
#1:  	English 2.0ch AC-3 @ 192 kb/s (Stereo)

https://nitro.download/view/B97BAFFD08991A7/Hitler’s.Madman.1943.DVDRip.x264-HANDJOB.mkv

Language(s):English
Subtitles:(none)

The post Douglas Sirk – Hitler’s Madman (1943) first appeared on Cinema of the World.

]]>
https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2024/01/hitlers-madman-1943/feed/ 0
Robert Siodmak – Phantom Lady (1944) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2023/11/phantom-lady-1944/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2023/11/phantom-lady-1944/#respond Mon, 06 Nov 2023 17:25:08 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=208939 Quote:Phantom Lady (1944) is one of the high points of ’40s film noir, the title alone evoking a potent mythology of this era. At the center of its narrative is the seemingly hopeless search for the title character who potentially serves as the only reliable witness in the murder trial for Scott Henderson (Alan Curtis), …

The post Robert Siodmak – Phantom Lady (1944) first appeared on Cinema of the World.

]]>

Quote:
Phantom Lady (1944) is one of the high points of ’40s film noir, the title alone evoking a potent mythology of this era. At the center of its narrative is the seemingly hopeless search for the title character who potentially serves as the only reliable witness in the murder trial for Scott Henderson (Alan Curtis), falsely accused of killing his wife. But the search is frustrated by Henderson’s inability to remember any details about the woman outside of a flamboyant hat she wore during the night they spent together, an unlikely memory lapse that only intensifies his apparent guilt. Furthermore, no one else who saw Henderson and the woman together will admit to the police that they had seen her. It is up to his assistant, Carol (Ella Raines), to initiate an investigation of her own. This implausible journey takes her on a tour of a decaying 1940s New York, during which Carol undergoes some implausible transformations of her own before the true murderer is revealed: in a complicated twist, Henderson’s close friend, Marlowe (Franchot Tone), performed the deed.

Perhaps what is most interesting about Phantom Lady is its relationship to a strain of ’40s cinema in which traditional narrative logic is subservient to a primarily poetic or lyrical approach. In this regard, the film is not simply of its moment but also anticipates certain aspects of post-war modernist cinema, in particular narratives revolving around the search for an elusive figure who may be alive or dead and who may have existed in reality or be a figment of someone’s imagination. Here we find narratives built less around traditional cause-and-effect, character driven investigations than narratives dominated by an obsessive form of stalking and trailing (see, for example the work of Antonioni, Resnais, Duras and Robbe-Grillet). Two creative figures behind Phantom Lady are central here: its director, Robert Siodmak, and the author of the novel upon which the film was based, Cornell Woolrich.

Woolrich’s crime novels consistently challenge the fetish for plausibility and pull us into a nightmarish world which follows its own internal drives, with the protagonists at the mercy of irrational forces. The construction of a Woolrich novel constitutes a ruin of classical detective fiction in which traditional explanations and resolutions are offered but almost invariably seem insufficient in relation to what has preceded it. Furthermore, the appeal of the novels has to do not simply with their intoxicating illogic but also their phenomenological detail and descriptions of urban spaces in a state of sweltering decay. Siodmak is an ideal candidate for this kind of story material and Phantom Lady is the film that established his Hollywood reputation. His origins in Weimar cinema (and the six years after this spent in France) allowed him to develop his superb and sensuously textured attention to details in mise en scène. But it also allowed him to absorb certain lessons from Expressionist and Surrealist cinema. Specifically, we see an approach to filmmaking concerned less with creating a fluid and organic environment than with one that obeys a poetic logic of its own. In this regard, the urban spaces of Phantom Lady resemble both the claustrophobic Weimar street film and the seductively decaying urban space of chance encounters beloved by the Surrealists. (Henderson’s meeting with the phantom lady suggests a fumbled version of this type of encounter.) In Siodmak, the characters are torn between irrational, repressive social forces and their own strong physical and romantic desires which pose a threat to that social order. In one of the major set pieces of the film, Carol attempts to stare down a bartender who refuses to remember seeing the ‘phantom lady’ and then stalks him through wet, humid streets and an elevated railway station. But nothing we see of Carol prior to this could prepare us for the shift from the modern working woman we see early in the film to this Medusa (Woolrich employs the name directly), as immobile as a statue sitting at the bar, vengefully attempting to break down this man through the sheer power of her gaze. Carol’s transformation here (as well as in the second set piece, when she becomes a sluttish hep-cat, attempting to seduce a drummer in the midst of a frenzied, erotic jam session) makes little conventional psychological sense. However, her function in the film is almost entirely symbolic, by turns Henderson’s gal Friday, a fairy tale princess (Henderson’s nickname for her, Kansas, suggests that her story may be read as a variation on The Wizard of Oz in which Carol undergoes a form of fairy-tale descent marked by bizarre metamorphoses) and a Surrealist heroine, mysteriously wandering city streets, alternately still and sensuously mobile, and disregarding any kind of logic outside of those of her own desires. But these transformations (and the bartender sequence as a whole) tap into something else.

Woolrich’s work often revolves around the problematic nature of memory, most often in relation to a crime which the protagonist may have committed but which their faulty memories (often aggravated by extreme trauma) cause them to either forget or be uncertain about. However, Henderson’s memory lapse is brought on by simple distraction – his anger at his wife precipitating his difficulty in fastening onto details about the ‘phantom lady.’ This is counterpointed with the unshakable certainty of the witnesses who claim never to have seen her. What, then, does Carol hope to achieve through this stare of hers except to force a memory out of a man who otherwise claims to have no memory for faces, a failure which he attributes solely to the distractions of his profession and which he finally dies for – running in front of a car – rather than confess? The all-powerful male gaze of such archetypal Weimar figures as Nosferatu and Mabuse is here passed on to a protagonist whose concerns could not be more different. In a brilliant reversal of the gender conventions of material of this nature, it is the woman who does the stalking and it is the woman who possesses the most powerful gaze of them all. But this gaze is not one that she possesses in monstrous terms but in order to uncover the truth and bring a memory into the light of day, as though Poe’s Ligeia and Lang’s Mabuse had been crossed with Hildy in Hawks’ His Girl Friday (1940).

While the film retains the novel’s lackluster pickup between Henderson and the ‘phantom lady,’ it adds details strengthening the theme of memory. The ‘phantom lady’ is more melancholic than in the novel and when we first see her in the bar she is playing an instrumental version of “I’ll Remember April” on the jukebox, a song whose lyrics (which we don’t ever hear in the film) testify to the gentle appeal of remembrance: “The fire will dwindle into glowing ashes/For flames of love will live such a little while/I won’t forget but I won’t be lonely/I’ll remember April and I’ll smile.” Throughout the opening, Terry perpetually stares off into space, scarcely making eye contact with Henderson. Henderson attempts to focus that stare onto something specific, drawing her attention to the “typical New York face” of the cab driver and asking Terry if she ever walks down New York streets and looks into people’s faces. Not until they attend the Brazilian revue, where the singer onstage is wearing the same hat as Terry and the two women lock malevolent glances at one another, is this vagueness of Terry’s look temporarily broken. The significance of “I’ll Remember April” and of the ‘phantom lady’s’ behavior is not clarified until near the end of the film. Carol tracks her down (real name: Ann Terry) and finds that the woman has suffered a nervous breakdown brought on by the sudden death of her fiancée the previous April. Terry’s paralysis is the result of the traumatic memory of the revelation of this death. If memories hold too little for Henderson they hold too much for Terry. But in either case, they are typical of a certain type of protagonist for Woolrich and Siodmak, masochistically accepting their fates rather than fighting against them, neither of them able to consistently look at or focus on anything. In a New York marked by individuals who seldom make eye contact or look for very long at anything, Carol’s relentless stare in the bar becomes the nightmarish reversal of the anonymity and averted glances of urban living.

Almost everyone who sees Phantom Lady expresses disappointment with its second half in which (in a departure from the structure of the novel) Marlowe is too quickly revealed to be the murderer and turns out to be a Nietzschean paranoiac madman besides. This structural and stylistic lapse is symptomatic of little more than two undigested side-by-side influences: Hitchcockian suspense (in which the spectator is given more information about the circumstances of a crime than the protagonists in order to increase emotional involvement on the part of the spectator) and Expressionist cinema. With Marlowe’s shadow looming over his victims, it is now he and not Carol who becomes a cross between Nosferatu and Mabuse, complete with over-the-top facial and hand contortions awkwardly imposed on an actor who could not be more American and less comfortable with this type of gestural repertoire. It is also in the second half of Phantom Lady that the film attempts to recuperate itself, to offer explanations and reassuringly resolve its issues. That it does not completely succeed in this regard suggests that the heart of the film lies elsewhere, on that deserted elevated train platform with Carol and the bartender, and in the various other detours the film has taken prior to this.

Robert Siodmak - (1944) Phantom Lady.mkv

General
Container:  	Matroska
Runtime: 	1 h 26 min
Size: 	1.78 GiB
Video
Codec: 	x264
Resolution: 	768x576 
Aspect ratio:  	4:3
Frame rate: 	23.976 fps
Bit rate: 	2 742 kb/s
BPP: 	0.259
Audio
#1:  	English 2.0ch AC-3 @ 192 kb/s

https://nitro.download/view/2EC8539409EE580/Robert_Siodmak_-_(1944)_Phantom_Lady.mkv

Language(s):English
Subtitles:None

The post Robert Siodmak – Phantom Lady (1944) first appeared on Cinema of the World.

]]>
https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2023/11/phantom-lady-1944/feed/ 0
Raoul Walsh – High Sierra (1941) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2020/09/raoul-walsh-high-sierra-1941/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2020/09/raoul-walsh-high-sierra-1941/#respond Wed, 30 Sep 2020 06:00:00 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=49507 Roy ‘Mad Dog’ Earle is broken out of prison by an old associate who wants him to help with an upcoming robbery. When the robbery goes wrong and a man is shot and killed Earle is forced to go on the run, and with the police and an angry press hot on his tail he …

The post Raoul Walsh – High Sierra (1941) first appeared on Cinema of the World.

]]>

Roy ‘Mad Dog’ Earle is broken out of prison by an old associate who wants him to help with an upcoming robbery. When the robbery goes wrong and a man is shot and killed Earle is forced to go on the run, and with the police and an angry press hot on his tail he eventually takes refuge among the peaks of the Sierra Nevadas, where a tense siege ensues. But will the Police make him regret the attachments he formed with two women during the brief planning of the robbery.

2.58GB | 1h 39mn | 768×576 | mkv

https://nitroflare.com/view/DD79C49FE21337B/High_Sierra_(1941)_-_WEB_576p.mkv
or
https://nitroflare.com/view/BA5456C6B86E1E6/High_Sierra_(1941)_-_WEB_576p.part1.rar
https://nitroflare.com/view/3AC30DAD7768AB4/High_Sierra_(1941)_-_WEB_576p.part2.rar
https://nitroflare.com/view/F48721C66B65535/High_Sierra_(1941)_-_WEB_576p.part3.rar

Language(s):English
Subtitles:English

The post Raoul Walsh – High Sierra (1941) first appeared on Cinema of the World.

]]>
https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2020/09/raoul-walsh-high-sierra-1941/feed/ 0
Jean Yarbrough – Abbott & Costello: The Naughty Nineties (1945) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2020/01/jean-yarbrough-abbott-costello-the-naughty-nineties-1945/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2020/01/jean-yarbrough-abbott-costello-the-naughty-nineties-1945/#comments Sat, 25 Jan 2020 08:30:00 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=121376 Abbott and Costello’s The Naughty Nineties offers a million laughs and a nickel’s worth of plot. Most of the film takes place aboard a 19th century showboat, owned by kindly Captain Sam (Henry Travers). Bud Abbott plays the showboat’s leading man Dexter Broadhurst, while Lou Costello is handyman Sebastian Dinwiddie. A group of slick gamblers …

The post Jean Yarbrough – Abbott & Costello: The Naughty Nineties (1945) first appeared on Cinema of the World.

]]>

Abbott and Costello’s The Naughty Nineties offers a million laughs and a nickel’s worth of plot. Most of the film takes place aboard a 19th century showboat, owned by kindly Captain Sam (Henry Travers). Bud Abbott plays the showboat’s leading man Dexter Broadhurst, while Lou Costello is handyman Sebastian Dinwiddie. A group of slick gamblers (Alan Curtis, Rita Johnson and Joe Sawyer) cheat Captain Sam out of his boat, turning the place into a floating gambling palace, but Dexter and Sebastian foil the villains and save the day. The film is a virtual encyclopedia of wheezy but still hilarious comedy routines, many of them devised by veteran Laurel & Hardy and Three Stooges gagman Felix Adler. The film’s highlight is a full-length performance of Abbott and Costello’s verbal classic “Who’s on First?”-and if one listens very closely, one can hear the cameramen and crew members laughing!
— Hal Erickson (AllMovie)

1.93GB | 1 h 16 min | 786×576 | mkv

https://nitro.download/view/DA89A7B64D6F39A/Abbott.&.Costello.The.Naughty.Nineties.1945.BluRay.576p.mkv
or
https://tezfiles.com/file/e457091281edf/Abbott._.Costello.The.Naughty.Nineties.1945.BluRay.576p.mp4

Language(s):English+commentary
Subtitles:English (muxed)

The post Jean Yarbrough – Abbott & Costello: The Naughty Nineties (1945) first appeared on Cinema of the World.

]]>
https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2020/01/jean-yarbrough-abbott-costello-the-naughty-nineties-1945/feed/ 2