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The Thief Details

FULL SYNOPSIS

For his directorial debut, Ray Milland went out on a creative limb, resulting in the first American film since Chaplin's City Lights without any spoken dialogue. The Thief stars Milland as Allan Fields, a nuclear physicist who has sold out to a foreign power. With only a few tinges of conscience, Fields sets about to steal vital scientific secrets and smuggle them out of the country. With the FBI on his trail, he briefly hides out in a rundown tenement house, where he inaugurates a desultory romance with a sluttish woman (Rita Gam, making her auspicious film debut). On the verge of escaping without detection, Fields is forced to commit a murder and things quickly go downhill from there. The novelty of silence (except for natural sound effects) is intriguing at first, though it wears off rather quickly; still, Ray Milland deserves at least a gold star for trying. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

Awards

Awarded by
Nominee
Category
Year
Status
Hollywood Foreign Press Association Rita Gam New Star of the Year - Female 1952 Nominee
Hollywood Foreign Press Association Russell Rouse Best Screenplay 1952 Nominee
Hollywood Foreign Press Association Ray Milland Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture - Drama 1952 Nominee
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Herschel Burke Gilbert Best Drama or Comedy Score 1952 Nominee
Hollywood Foreign Press Association Clarence Greene Best Screenplay 1952 Nominee

Cast

Ray Milland
as Allan Fields
Rita Gam
as The Girl
Martin Gabel
as Mr. Bleek

Crew

Russell Rouse
Director
Clarence Greene
Producer
Clarence Greene
Screenwriter
Russell Rouse
Screenwriter
Herschel Burke Gilbert
Composer (Music Score)
Chester Schaeffer
Editor
Murray Waite
Set Designer
Leon Chooluck
First Assistant Director
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