The Informer (1935) Poster

(1935)

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8/10
Important work of Irish patriotism from Ford still potent...
Don-10223 March 1999
Victor McLaglen, the title character of John Ford's THE INFORMER, reminded me of the circus man from Fellini's LA STRADA. Anthony Quinn played the brutish man, who may have even been influenced by the pug-faced, Oscar-winning performance given by McLaglen. Poverty-stricken Dublin is the true-life, atmospheric setting of the picture, which takes place in 1922. Dense fog and a long damp night are the main elements of a story about deep Irish patriotism and the fight of the Irish Republican Army. The conflict of individuality and the cause is what makes THE INFORMER tick. McLaglen's large, simple character just wants to go to America and we're reminded by signs of the price for a ticket frequently. Two different signs become the psychological centerpiece for the drunken Irishman. One is the previous, the other a WANTED sign. Should he do it and get the money to go?

John Ford once famously said, "My name is Ford. I make Westerns." After seeing this film, he obviously could do a heck of a lot more. The serious social issues dealt with here are heartfelt and ones you will find yourself thinking about. And the look of the piece is amazing, consisting of long dark shadows cutting into a miserable Ireland night. Ford was always known for his luminescent, gorgeous cinematography that helped to foresee the conflicts within his characters. This is hard in color, but he did it in pictures like THE SEARCHERS, painting John Wayne in a sometimes vicious manner. Victor McLaglen's performance not only benefits from the lighting, but by the sheer simplicity of his acting. He shoves a lot. He knocks people out. He is a brute who knows no better. He should, however, know whether or not to cross the IRA.

See the film to find out the gritty details. See it also for McLaglen and Ford's patriotic portrayal of the IRA. Max Steiner's score is innovative in how it matches gestures of the characters, placing more emphasis on them. This was usually only seen in silent films, especially Chaplin. The topic of naming names or "informing" is obviously still important. Just look at how the media covered this year's Oscars, giving much attention to the Elia Kazan scandal.
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7/10
John Ford's classic with intense drama and astounding images that linger in your memory
ma-cortes1 September 2013
Dublin, 1922 . Gypo Nolan (Victor McLagen) , a slow-witted Irish pug has been ousted from the rebel organization . He is hungry and attempts to impress his ladylove . When he finds that his equally destitute girlfriend Katie Madden (Margot Grahame) has been reduced to prostitution , he succumbs to temptation and turns his friend Frankie McPhillip (Wallace Ford) in for money to the British authorities for a 20 pound reward . Nolan then feels doom closing in . He also gets his comeuppance from the IRA (whose leader is Preston Foster) . Later on , Gypo gets home Mrs. McPhillip (Una O'Connor) and Mary McPhillip (Heather Angel) .

Intense film about loneliness , suspicion , frightening , treason , information ; and including a descriptive, evocative black-and-white cinematography . This is a dramatic film dealing with thought-provoking themes about betrayal , guilt and retribution . John Ford re-made "The Informer" (1929) by Arthur Robinson ; and , obviously, he was influenced by this version . Good acting by Victor Mclagen as a strong but none too bright man who betrays his former comrade , though overacting and bears excessive gesticulation . The day before shooting McLagen's trial scene , he proceeded to go out drinking - which Ford knew he would do - and the next day was forced to film the scene with a terrible hangover, which was just the effect Ford wanted . John Ford had been highly impressed by F.W. Murnau's ¨Sunrise¨ and wanted to bring an element of German Expressionism to this film . As it displays an expressionist cinematography by Joseph M August , plenty if lights and dark , being well showed in the course of one gloomy , foggy night . Interesting screenplay by Dudley Nichols who wrote the script in six days , being based from the story by Liam O'Flaherty .

This was the first of RKO's three-picture deal with director John Ford and despite its deserved reputation and multiple Oscars, it was a low budget production . Another reason why RKO was reluctant to make the film was because a version of the story had already been filmed in the UK in 1929 .Initially a box office failure, the film made millions when it was re-released after its multiple wins at the Academy Awards .Shot in 17 days and its production costs came to a mere $243,000 . The picture belongs the Ford's second period -subsequently his silent time-when John Ford (1895-1973) made a rich variety of stories and his reputation rightly rests on his work in the 30s and 1940s, as ¨Grapes of wrath¨ , ¨How green was my valley¨ , ¨Fugitive¨ , ¨They were expendable¨, ¨My darling Clementine¨ and the Cavalry trilogy
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8/10
A Flannelmouth Fool
bkoganbing16 February 2006
I don't doubt that Victor McLaglen won his Best Actor Oscar for this film by dint of a three way split among the Mutiny on the Bounty leads of Clark Gable, Charles Laughton, and Franchot Tone who were all in the same race. But The Informer is still a fine film because John Ford wouldn't have gotten his first Best Director Oscar if it wasn't. No split involved in his award.

The movie and the story by Liam O'Flaherty that it is based on involves a poor simpleton of a man named Gypo Nolan who was once a member of the Irish Republican Army. He was cashiered out of it for some imbecilic stunt he pulled and wants back in. He's down to his last pence and if he can't get back in, wants enough for passage to America. There's a twenty pound reward for information leading to the arrest of a former comrade named Frankie McPhillip played by Wallace Ford. In a moment of weakness he goes to the Black and Tan constabulary and informs on McPhillip.

The IRA is pretty anxious to find out who ratted McPhillip out and they're pretty certain it was McLaglen. He hasn't the wit to really cover his own tracks. He does make a feeble effort to implicate another man named Peter Mulligan played by Donald Meek. He also picks up a hanger-on played by J.M. Kerrigan.

The whole action of The Informer takes place in 1922 in Dublin from about six in the evening to early the following morning. Of a necessity it is shot in darkness and shadows, making it possibly the first noir thriller. Had it been done post World War II The Informer would have ranked as a great noir classic, like Odd Man Out or the The Third Man which it bares a lot of resemblance to.

John Ford knew this world very well. He took some time off during the Rebellion and was in Ireland at the time and had a brother who was in the IRA. His real name before having it anglicized was Sean O'Fiernan.

Preston Foster plays the IRA commandant Dan Gallagher. In the book Gallagher is a harder and meaner man than Foster has him here. My guess is that John Ford wanted him as a sympathetic character to give movie fans some rooting interest. He makes it clear that Foster has to eliminate the informer because the Black and Tans will grab him and get quite a bit more out of him and put the whole organization in peril.

The IRA trial scene is the highlight of the film. When Foster asks Donald Meek whether he recognizes the authority of their court, Meek ain't in a position to say no. The King's justice and writ does not run here. It graphically illustrates at that point despite occupation by army troops and constabulary, the British are indeed losing their grip on the population.

Of course The Informer a rather grim story has its John Ford touches, but rather fewer than you would expect. Even as McLaglen is spending his money on a drunken spree, the IRA is constantly in the shadows watching him and counting every farthing.

The Informer is a tale well told about Ireland in a grim and dismal time.
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9/10
My brief review of the film
sol-16 August 2005
A thought-provoking drama of desperate living, paranoia, and the consequences of one's actions, John Ford gives the film an appropriately dark atmosphere, and the sets have a nightmarish quality to them. As McLaglen stumbles half-drunk through the night, everything around him shows his feelings. His character tends to often feel guilty, but at other times he feels in the mood to celebrate. He is overcome by a wave of different emotions, upset from different things. McLaglen handles all of this very well, giving a startling realistic performance that is good enough to provide some compensation for Margot Grahame's over-acting. However, this is just the one character that is complex and fascinating. The supporting characters all are very thin, and the romance between Foster and Angel adds nothing to the tale. Even so, this is very effective film-making, with some clever use of dissolve editing and a haunting music score by Max Steiner. It is overall quite an effective film about moral play, desperation and responsibility.
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8/10
Dire poverty leads to betrayal during Irish Rebellion
mdm-112 June 2005
A brilliant portrait of a traitor (Victor McLaglen in Oscar winning performance) who is hounded by his own conscience. McLaglen plays an IRA rouge who betrays his leader to collect a reward during Ireland's Sinn Fein Rebellion. The scenes showing fights and mob actions are very realistic, focusing on the desperation within individuals. The lack of hope for a better future seems to be a fate worse than death.

Director John Ford superbly creates an murky and tense atmosphere, enhanced by the foggy and grimy depiction of the Irish landscape. Max Steiner's dramatic music score adds to the cinematic delight. Oscar Winner also for Best Screenplay, nominated for Best Picture. This is one of Hollywood's Classic.
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Life in 1920's Ireland
eibon0916 March 2000
An excellent movie of the issue of being an informant and the consequences of the deed. Victor McLagen gives a sympatheic performance as Gypo Nolan, a man who's only way to Move to America is to tell on his best friend. This was one of the first movies that looks into the lives and organization of the IRA(Irish Republic Army). The Informer(1935) is good at showing the poverty stricken Northern Ireland of the 1920's.

Although John Ford has been making films since the early teens, it is this movie that put his name on the map. The Informer(1935) along with The Searchers(1956) are John Ford's most Catholic driven motion pictures as it deals with guilt and redemption. John Ford was good at showing the lifestyles and values of many Irishmen in many of his work. I Only wish that this movie was available on Home Video as it is hard to find.
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7/10
All told, a flawed picture, but still of considerable interest.
JohnHowardReid21 October 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Director: JOHN FORD. Screenplay: Dudley Nichols. Based on the 1925 novel by Liam O'Flaherty. Photography: Joseph August. Film editor: George Hively. Music: Max Steiner. Art directors: Van Nest Polglase, Charles Kirk. Set decorator: Julia Heron. Costumes: Walter Plunkett. Make-up: Robert J. Schiffer. Music orchestrations: Maurice DePackh, Bernard Kaun. Special effects: Harry Redmond. Sound editor: Robert Wise. Sound recording: Hugh McDowell, Jr. RCA Sound System. Associate producer: Cliff Reid.

Copyright 24 May 1935 by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc. New York opening at the Radio City Music Hall 9 May 1935 (ran one week). U.S. release: 1 May 1935. U.K. release: October 1935. Australian release: 21 August 1935. 10 reels. 91 minutes.

SYNOPSIS: Dublin, 1922. Irishman betrays a rebel to the police for the reward money.

NOTES: Academy Award, Best Actor, Victor McLaglen (defeating a trio of nominees from Mutiny on the Bounty: Clark Gable, Charles Laughton and Franchot Tone).

Academy Award, Directing, John Ford (defeating Henry Hathaway for Lives of a Bengal Lancer, and Frank Lloyd for Mutiny on the Bounty). Academy Award, Screenplay, Dudley Nichols (defeating Lives of a Bengal Lancer and Mutiny on the Bounty).

Academy Award, Best Music Score, Max Steiner (defeating Herbert Stothart's Mutiny on the Bounty, and Ernst Toch's Peter Ibbetson). Also nominated for Best Picture (Mutiny on the Bounty), and Film Editing (A Midsummer Night's Dream).

Best Motion Picture of 1935 — New York Film Critics. Best Direction, John Ford — New York Film Critics. Number 3 (after David Copperfield and Lives of a Bengal Lancer) on the Film Daily annual poll of U.S. film critics.

Negative cost: $243,000. (Ford shot the entire film in 17 days).

Re-make of a 1929 British silent starring Lars Hansen as Gypo, Warwick Ward as Dan Gallagher, and Lya de Putti as Katie Fox (Gypo's mistress with whom he wrongly suspects Frankie McPhillip is having an affair. This is the reason Gypo betrays Frankie to the police). The film, scripted by Benn W. Levy and Rolfe E. Vanlo, was directed by Arthur Robinson.

Re-made in 1968 by director Jules Dassin as Uptight!

COMMENT: Unfortunately, "The Informer" doesn't stand up terribly well. August's shadowy photography still looks marvelous, but we are less impressed by the over-use of symbolism (count up how many times we see the "Frankie McPhillip Wanted for Murder" poster superimposed over the Twenty Pounds), and the over-talkative, getting-no-place circular dialogue — especially when that dialogue is delivered by amateurish players like the stolidly stiff Preston Foster and the hammy Victor McLaglen (pronounced "mack-lock-len").

The opening scenes are saved by August's appealingly atmospheric photography and Ford's intuitive sense of drama and vibrant mise en scene. Fortunately, that charismatic actor, J. M. Kerrigan, is on hand for the middle portion of the film.

But try as they might, neither Ford nor August can save the last third of the picture from Nichols' jejeune dialogue and McLaglen's excesses. Steiner's score too is at its most forceful in the first half and tends to overly "Mickey Mouse" the climax.
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10/10
Masterpiece; one of John Ford's best films
zetes26 June 2002
Warning: Spoilers
Gypo Nolan (Victor McLaglen) is as poor as anyone on Earth. Living in 1920s Ireland, Gypo and his fellow Irishmen are part of an underground rebellion against the oppressive Brits. One particular rebel, wanted for murder by the English, arrives back into town secretly. He thinks he can trust his friend Gypo, but the £20 reward proves too tempting. Gypo gets his friend killed and sinks into a pit of despair and drunkenness. Meanwhile, the other Irish rebels are searching for the informer. Right away, Gypo, with money burning a hole in his pocket, is their main suspect, but they, who are his friends, don't want to believe it. The story of The Informer is simple in its plot, but complex in its moral and emotional issues. It's easily one of John Ford's most emotionally involving films. What Gypo did was wrong, but we can certainly understand his motives. We also understand his sorry character, and there's a lot of sympathy that arises for him. The script is very suspenseful, as well. It's the kind of suspense where we are pretty sure we know how everything will end up, so we have to grit our teeth and bear along with it. The acting is remarkable. Victor McLaglen, who acted in many of Ford's films, probably gave his best performance here (and won an Oscar for it). Every other performer in the film deserves his or her kudos. In addition to an amazing script and acting, The Informer is one of John Ford's most expressionistic films. I love the darker side of Ford. In its mood, as well as in its themes, The Informer reminds me of two of my other favorite Ford films, The Long Voyage Home (1940) and The Fugitive (1948); it's also a bit similar to The Grapes of Wrath (1940) in these respects. 10/10.
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7/10
Grimness with a vengeance
TheLittleSongbird27 May 2020
Haven't read the source material, a very rare case for me not reading a book before seeing its film adaptation, but there were plenty of reasons to see 'The Informer'. It is always interesting to me to see the great John Ford going into non-Western territory and seeing a film from early in his career, and that was the biggest reason. The story sounded great, the significant awards attention intrigued, Max Steiner was a great film composer and the title grabbed the attention. Nice cast too.

'The Informer' could have been quite a lot better. There are so many brilliant things here, the best things also being the things that got award attention, and it had a lot of potential to be a classic. It is one of Ford's better early films and one of the ones to put him on the map. But for me 'The Informer' was not the masterpiece proclaimed by other trusted viewers (though their opinions are still very much respected) and has some frustrating elements that make it an interesting and impressive film but a flawed one.

Am going to start with what didn't work for me. Will agree that the characters are very flimsily sketched, with only the main character being properly meaty, and that the romance is completely unnecessary and felt like padding.

Did feel too that some of the dialogue is very cornball and can ramble self-indulgently and while a vast majority of the cast give good to brilliant performances Preston Foster is the exception, with him being as stiff as a board.

On the other point of view, Ford's direction is at its very best masterful. Especially in his expert handling of the brooding atmosphere and authenticity of the setting. His direction in the character interactions are intelligently done too. Victor McLaglen was never better than he is here in 'The Informer', a meaty role given a lot of tension and nuance, he played this type of role frequently in his career but never equalled it as effectively as here. The rest of the cast are fine too, with a big standout being the ever delightful Una O'Connor. Heather Angel is charming.

Moreover, 'The Informer' is magnificently photographed. How such atmosphere-filled and beautifully framed and lit cinematography wasn't even nominated at the Oscars was a big oversight. The scenery is handsome yet evocative and the editing always succinct and never cheap. Steiner's score is lush and haunting as usual and to me it didn't overbear. Enough of the script is literate and taut and have always admired how there are films that take grim subject matters and tackle them in a pull no punches way. 'The Informer' does that.

To conclude, well done and with a lot that impresses. There was room for improvement though. 7/10
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9/10
After 65 years, this film is still all too timely
llltdesq24 November 2000
This film deals with the Irish rebellion in the 1920s and more specifically one man's life after he informs on a friend for the bounty on his head and the subsequent consequences. Watching the film, I got the feeling that you could take the script and with just some minor updates, do it again and it, sadly, would still fit contemporary events. But te remake wouldn't be nearly as good. A magnificent performance by Victor McLaglen (for which he deservedly got an Oscar) and a fine ensemble cast that includes most, if not all the actors with brogues in Hollywood at the time, most of them recognizable character actors either established at the time or just starting out. A very good film well worth watching. Highly recommended.
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6/10
Classic but badly dated...
eddyskiva13 March 2006
Classic film, understandably it has an honored place in film history... but... having seen it several times.... it dates very badly. Most of the criticism posted here are valid (except the one complaining it was depressing.... um... yes... it's a serious story without a 'happy' ending... that is not a reason to call a film 'bad'). McLaglen's performance is one of the most over the top, hammed up show cases ever put on film. It was all daring and new and interesting in 1935, but not anymore. It's a film I respect, but it's very hard to see through the creaky and old fashioned acting style. John Ford does well, and I reserve opinion on whether he really deserved a Best Direction Oscar for it.... (the lumbering hammy content was, after all, in his hands). Yes, the sets show the low budget, and the characters are very stereotypical.
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10/10
One of the all time greats of cinema
pan-1014 November 2002
Magnificent and unforgettable, stunningly atmospheric, and brilliantly acted by all.

I really cannot understand what sort of people are panning this masterpiece and giving the preponderance of votes as 8 (and nine ones!)

This, along with Grapes of Wrath, is John Ford's greatest movie. I would say that Long Voyage Home is next in line, though quite a way back.

Rating: 10. It deserves a 12.
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6/10
O'Flaherty simplified and sanitized
mukava99113 November 2008
The Informer is a lyrical and rather artsy reimagining of Liam O'Flaherty's grim novel of betrayal set during the Irish troubles of the 1920's. Co-producer and director John Ford, co- producer Cliff Reid and screenwriter Dudley Nichols pared down the original considerably and brought out what they saw as its essence – the struggle of one Gypo Nolan with his conscience, fought out not only within his own stunted brain but through interactions with various characters who were also simplified and sanitized, the better to direct our attention to the tormented title character. This modern-day Judas tale retains some of the power of the Biblical antecedent. A desperate former member of a revolutionary organization betrays a fugitive comrade to the police for what seems to him a grand sum of money. The comrade is killed; the informer is paid; the money is worthless the moment he acquires it. The realization of what he has done prompts him to drown his consciousness in liquor and get rid of the ill- gotten gain in whatever haphazard way he can.

Representing the slummy underworld of Dublin are stage sets by Van Nest Polglase that suggest drabness, meanness and poverty in a movie studio way. The slum dwellers are presented as alternately rowdy and pious with little in between. Many of the characters in the original novel were so decayed and sordid that mainstream movie studios would not have been able to put them on screen intact. The politics of the organization which the title character betrays are kept nebulous and generic. In the novel it was actually a communist cell within the Irish national movement – but that might have given audiences too much to think about. The character of Dan Gallagher, chief of the local revolutionary group, who investigates whether Gypo is guilty, is played boringly and stiffly by Robert Preston. To be fair, the part is underwritten. Gallagher, a die-hard communist revolutionary who can't quite understand what makes himself tick, is just as complex as Nolan but from page to screen loses his human nature and is reduced to "the handsome romantic love interest" to the sister of the betrayed man. The subsidiary members of the organization are presented in the vein of Hollywood gangster's sidekicks, ciphers with interesting faces instead of full-blown, conflicted individuals whose lives and traits would hold our interest. There is plenty of action, all of it expertly choreographed, to breathe life into what might have otherwise been stagy and static, for there is a great deal of talk in the source material.

The title character in the book was damaged goods, ravaged by hunger, bruised and beaten by cops, unwashed, unschooled. As embodied by Victor McLaglen he comes across more like a well-fed dock worker with bad manners. The scenarists try to make up for this whitewashing of the main character by showing him drinking whiskey as if it's Kool Aid and tossing annoying people around, in the manner of the Frankenstein monster, like rag dolls. Both tendencies are in the novel but here they are exaggerated. It is simply impossible to believe that someone could drink so much hard liquor in one night without becoming violently ill or passing out cold. True, he does fall asleep on his girlfriend's floor toward the end, but more in the way of a nap than the kind of blacked-out unconsciousness that should have occurred under the circumstances. As for Katie, the woman in Gypo's life, Margot Grahame is far too scrubbed and attractive for this setting. Her relationship with Gypo is changed from a crude interdependence based on brute survival needs to a more conventional Hollywood loving couple arrangement, which really makes no sense in the context of the narrative. Although prostitution is presented more frankly here than in most movies of the era, it still had to be gauzed over. As the slain fugitive's mother, Una O'Connor is on hand with her trademark howling – a waste of her talents.

The Informer was considered very strong stuff back in 1935. It's more of a curiosity today.
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4/10
Distinctive work in the direction of John Ford but nothing else
kevvportela4 April 2021
John Ford's work that earned him his first win at the Oscars for Best Directing. The story is told of an Irishman (Victor McLaglen) desperate for money in poor living conditions, he betrays a friend for 20 pounds, this unleashes a drama that involves an undercover group in the neighborhood where they are looking for this informer.

Personally, it was difficult to see and dense despite having a normal duration, there are interesting directive decisions of styles that I later investigate and it shows that they were innovative or striking for the time but they were not enough for me. Something that caught my attention is the script, I do not take advantage of the situation that the main character got into at all, it did not have an evolution or deepening, from the beginning it always looks the same, it is not surprising and boring.

Victor McLaglen is too big for the statuette for Best Actor compared to his opponents that year, he gives a basic interpretation with some scenes that like the first talk with the head of the group undercover or the final scene in the church but then it seemed too loud to me and baseless violence. The characters of Preston Foster and Heather Angel became more interesting and better executed to me.

It is good in technical resources, especially in directing, but when telling the story, it becomes uncomfortable and dense even putting you in tune with the contemporaneity of that time.
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Judas's timeless story.
dbdumonteil11 May 2002
A lot of movies of John Ford (Sean O'Feeney) deal with Ireland.At every stage of a long and brilliant career,he gets back to his roots in his homeland:"the informer" and "the plough and the stars" are early period;"the quiet man " is middle, "young Cassidy" is late.

Far from being "one of the worst movies of the thirties" ,"the informer " belongs to its time:that's true that the studios deny realism but that was true for Fritz Lang's "M" and Marcel Carné's "réalisme poétique" too.Anyway,at a pinch,no matter if it's a political subject in the Ireland of the twenties:what Ford has to say to us is universal:when a man betrays his best friend,be it for thirty coins of silver or for twenty quids,he will be eaten with remorse ,everything that he'll see and hear will remember him of the awful thing he's done.Gypo won't take advantage of his pitiful reward,he will loose everything except the victim's mother's compassion and forgiveness. All through this dark movie,Gypo will roam the foggy streets ,a desperate man:you should not forget that he is an outcast from the beginning:dismissed by the IRA,because he hadn't guts enough to kill a prisoner,and outside a girl,and Jackie (the man he will betray),he's on his own ,a man who suffers from hunger and,worse, lack of self-esteem -the one time when he finds solace is when he has a rest near his girl's fireplace-This character is not that much far from Peter Lorre's part in "M":both movies feature a secret trial.

As always in Ford's cinema,women are figures of peace love and understanding,and for them a man can always redeem his soul: here Katie and the mother.In "quiet man" ,Wayne is given a second chance thanks to Ireland and... Maureen O'Hara.And after all Ford's last movie will be "seven women" (1966) :a doctor(Ann Bancroft) will triumph over barbary against all odds.
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9/10
King Gypo impressed the hell out of me
Ham_and_Egger13 August 2006
One of John Ford's best films 'The Informer' doesn't feature any grand scenery of the American West. Instead the intense drama Ford was known for plays out on the no less rugged terrain of British character actor Victor McLaglen's face. The former prizefighter, who once faced Joe Louis in the ring, delivers an Academy Award-winning portrayal of disgraced IRA soldier Gypo Nolan on the worst night of his life.

The plot is gracefully simple: In 1922 Dublin, a starving and humiliated man who's been thrown out of the IRA for being unable to kill an informant in cold blood, himself becomes an informant. For £20 he betrays a friend to "the Tans" and for the rest of the night he drinks and gives away his blood money in rapidly alternating spasms of guilt, denial, self-pity, and a desperate desire to escape the consequences of his actions.

It is the remarkable complexity given to the character of the seemingly simple Gypo that is the film's most impressive achievement. In most movies a burly lout of Gypo's type would be cast as the heavy, he'd have at best two or three lines and be disposed of quickly so the hero and the villain could have their showdown. In 'The Informer' Gypo himself is both hero and villain, while the showdown is in his inner turmoil, every bit of which is explicitly shared with the audience.

Because Liam O'Flaherty's novel had previously been filmed in 1929, RKO gave Ford a very modest budget. The director and his associates, particularly cinematographer Joseph H. August, turned this to their advantage in creating a claustrophobic masterpiece about a man at war with himself. In addition to McLaglen's Oscar 'The Informer' also won John Ford his first along with wins for Best Screenplay and Best Score.
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9/10
McLaglen and Ford earned their awards
barbb195327 July 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Maybe it's because I looked up the history of the Irish troubles in the 1920s and then the sad Civil War that engulfed the Free State after the signing of the treaty before watching this movie. Anyway, the sudden turn at the end brought tears to my eyes.

Victor McLaglen isn't as famous today as he was back then, and he should be better remembered. In this film, I think he's playing himself as he would have been without his innate talent and brains. For example, the scenes where his buddy in the crowd is challenging men to fight with him is probably quite reminiscent of what McLaglen actually did in earlier years, when he was a world-class bare-knuckles boxer. John Ford is partly responsible for that; the IMDb trivia section shows how he tricked McLaglen into getting a really bad hangover for the trial scene. This director also could bring out a lot in his actors, even without such tricks. Mostly, though, McLaglen is firmly in control, especially when his character is almost totally blotto (which is difficult for an actor to do believably), and he also plays Gypo Nolan with a depth and emotional power that is surprising for someone who has only seen McLaglen later in his career, in "The Quiet Man." I especially like the contrast between this role as an IRA man and the much more obviously controlled performance he gave as the IRA man Denis Hogan in "Hangman's House."

In "The Quiet Man," of course, McLaglen is a country squire at odds with the local IRA. Victor McLaglen was big and bully, in the old-fashioned sense of the word, but he was a good actor, too, and capable of wide range and fine nuances of performance that we just wouldn't expect of a such a man today. It's a rather sad comment on our own set of expectations and prejudices.

Ford, as usual, packs a lot into a little bit of film. All the characters are excellent (though the Commandant's mostly American accent is distracting) -- NOTE: There be spoilers ahead! -- Knowing that Gypo once drew the short straw and was ordered to kill a man but let him talk his way out of it instead, we really empathize with the man who draws the short straw for executing Gypo, and the humanity he shows, most notably when they go to take Gypo in Mary's room.

John Ford really shows his genius here, taking what could have been a gruesome and yet expected outcome to the whole story and instead using it to set up a totally unexpected and yet very satisfying ending that makes us think not just of Gypo and the other characters, but of poor Ireland during that tortured time.
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6/10
The Informer's Guilt
ilovesaturdays12 July 2020
The story is set in Ireland of 1922. Former IRA man Gypo is in dire straits. The only way out of his extreme poverty and misery is to rat out his close friend, who is also involved with the IRA, is a fugitive and has a reward on his head. Further, Gypo's girlfriend is reduced to poverty-induced prostitution and wishes to take a boat to America to start her life afresh with him, but he doesn't have money for the fare. All these circumstances force Gypo to eventually inform on his friend but he is wracked with guilt in the police station while the Tans kill his friend in a gruesome encounter (The scenes depicting these events are particularly good). Gypo gets his reward & can thus buy tickets for two on a boat to US. However, this is where Gypo differs from a typical sewer rat. While a typical 'informer' would've maintained a low profile and fled as soon as possible, Gypo's guilt over his misdeed is so great that it eventually destroys him. He tries to drown his conscience in alcohol but that doesn't help either. Meanwhile the IRA is on his case because they realize that even a single mole is dangerous to the safety of the entire organization.

This is a character study with the protagonist transforming from a wretched and pitiable character to one who seems to be beyond any redemption. It is like watching a train wreck. You can see how Gypo keeps making the wrong choices- one after the other, but you are unable to stop his madness and folly. He is a perplexing character because he is physically very strong and seems invincible, but isn't good at logic and reasoning. Gypo fails to foresee how his treachery is going to affect him and all others around him. Irish independence and IRA clearly mean a lot to him and he is desperate to gain the approval of his worthy ex-colleagues, but he fails to factor all these things into consideration before informing on his friend. He is obviously quite foolish, drinks a lot and is boorish at times. So, here's a character that exasperates you since he's done an unpardonable act but he 'didn't know what he was doing'! One can't help feel pity, disgust and a bit of compassion for him.

It is a decent film but hasn't dated too well. The climax is a bit over-dramatic for my taste. Also, I wish the protagonist was a bit better as a person. It was mean of him to implicate someone else for his own misdeeds. Only his girlfriend and his friend's mother seem to find him naive and innocent; everyone else sees him with distrust and contempt, justified reactions if you ask me.
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10/10
Amazing in every respect...
Indyrod21 August 2008
This amazing Oscar winner (4 in total) and John Ford's first Academy Award winner, is simply spellbinding with a pounding score by Max Steiner. Called an Art film, because Ford had very little money to make this great story about guilt and retribution, and greed and stupidity. But what makes this movie such a classic, is the direction and astounding photography and use of fog and lighting, that was so different from the usual American film, and more in the tradition of German expressionism. And the Oscar winning performance by Victor McLaglen as the drunken Gypo is simply unbelievable. Basically the movie takes place in Ireland, and Gypo turns in a friend in the rebel movement to the English to collect 20 pounds to give to his girlfriend. But having all that money, he starts blowing it on an all night drunk and giving it away, while the leaders of the movement are trying to track down the informer. The whole movie is one night in a dark and foggy Ireland, and a cast of characters that are memorable but all along, the whole world of Gypo is closing in on him, both psychologically. If I had to pick maybe three directors to have ALL their movies on a deserted island forever, and nobody elses, John Ford would certainly be one of them. What a truly remarkable movie...
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7/10
A dark drama Oscar winner set in early 1920s Ireland
SimonJack7 October 2021
Warning: Spoilers
"The Informer" is a drama set in Dublin in 1922 - the year after the end of the Irish War of Independence (1919-1921). The war was fought between the Irish Republican Army (IRA) and British forces. From 1922 on, the IRA went underground and became an insurgent organization for decades into the future. The movie is based on a 1925 novel of the same title by Liam O'Flaherty.

Victor McLaglen plays Gypo Nolan, who had been kicked out of the IRA. The times are hard with many people out of work. That includes Gypo and his girlfriend, Katie Madden, who can't pay her rent or buy food. Victor sees a travel poster in a store window. It advertises the ship fare to America as only 10-pounds. For 20-pounds, one could go in comfort. And, Gypo also sees and is tempted by a poster offering 20 pounds for information about Frankie McPhillip. He is a friend of Gypo's who is wanted for murder.

Gypo gives in, goes to the police and tells them that they can find Frankie visiting his mother. They raid the house and kill Frankie. Members of the IRA are sure someone informed and they set about to find the informer. Gypo accuses an elderly tailor with a cock and bull story. But then, as he's tormented some for having betrayed his friend, he goes to a pub and starts drinking. Before long, a fair-weather chum, Tommy Connor, latches on to him and Gypo buys drinks for everyone. He then sets out on a spree, goaded on by Tommy, drinking, raising cane and spending most of his 20 pounds.

One would like to sympathize with Gypo, but he falsely fingers another man as the informer. If anything, this film shows that a person who's drunk will often do things he or she wouldn't do sober or otherwise. Gypo is hauled before an underground IRA court and with more denial and attempts to finger Peter Mulligan, he finally confesses.

The film has some dramatic last scenes of Gypo with Katie, Katie with Frankie's sister, Mary, and with Frankie's mother in the church. "The Informer" won four Oscars at the Academy Awards, including best actor for McLaglen and best director for John Ford. In 2018 the Library of Congress picked the film for preservation in the National Film Registry.

McLaglen gives a good performance and beat out three nominees for the best actor Oscar who were in "Mutiny on the Bounty." Two prominent supporting actors of the day have good roles -- Donald Meek and Una O'Connor. But after watching this film again recently, I could see why another film hasn't been made centered around a sot. In about 80 percent of this film, McLaglen's Gypo is drunk. He staggers, swoons, bellows, pounds tables, pushes people, etc. He had the right physique and appearance, and acting ability, to be able to pull that role off. I doubt if anyone else could - then or since then. But I wouldn't be inclined to sit through another film in which the main character is the focus and acts drunk most of the time. Probably, few other people would either - and that's most likely why this film hasn't been made again.

I'm not sure how much this film would appeal to most audiences today. It does give a somewhat historical picture of early 1920s Ireland and the social conditions there.
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9/10
Act Of Faith
telegonus20 July 2002
To watch this film from start to finish without bursting into laughter at some point requires almost an act of faith, as one has to keep saying to oneself, "it's old", "it's a classic", "be kind", not because the movie is so bad, but because at its best it's so good. This is one dated movie. It's also a classic, if a tarnished one. I'm not inclined to laugh at people anyway, on principle, and I get more than a little irritated when others do so. To make fun of The Informer to my mind is a little like giggling at an idiot savant when he dribbles his orange juice all over the tablecloth. Yes, one says to oneself, he is an idiot, and yet when he's on top of his game he is also a true savant. The same is true for The Informer, which is on occasion very dreadful indeed, and yet it boasts splendid photography, some fine acting, a wonderful score and a good, decent simple story. In the end, which I won't give away, politics, religion and psychology come together, in a church, in such a way as to make the scene seem corny and over the top, and yet so is life sometimes. Uneducated people of simple faith behave differently from us (presumably brilliant) modern folks, and the scene isn't so much unbelievable (I buy it, but I know the Irish) as embarrassing. Yet people do behave that way, they do say things like that. Not everyone is hip, and it may not even be desirable for everyone to be hip. Are people today so much superior to those of seventy or eighty years ago? And in what way? I don't think so. We're just different. Now go watch the movie.
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6/10
I must be the "odd man out"
planktonrules26 August 2006
Warning: Spoilers
I know that this John Ford film received Oscars for both his direction and Victor McLaglen's acting, so I was very surprised how it did not particularly impress me. While very beautifully filmed, the plot just seemed too simple and repetitive. Plus, the title of the film really says it all--it's the story about a guy who betrays one of his comrades. 'Nuff said. Plus, while many were impressed by McLaglen, I really thought he hammed it up a bit and his less than subtle acting style was much more suited to supporting roles. Overall, while still NOT a bad film, I got quickly bored by the whole thing and feel this film hasn't aged very well.

Perhaps I would have felt more connection to the film if I had Irish ancestry. I'm sure Irish-Americans felt drawn to the characters and the fight between the IRA and Brits. I just felt that it was hard to care at all about a group of people who were terrorists. After all, Wallace Reid, the guy wanted by the Brits, is wanted for murder. So how can I particularly feel sorry for him? It just seems that if in the 21st century we are expected to condemn world-wide terrorism, I can't allow myself to condemn some while excusing others. Terror is terror after all. And, feeling sorry for terrorists just seems wrong. And so, at times, I felt McLaglen's character did the right thing (but for totally selfish reasons)--thus destroying the crux of the film.
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8/10
Betraying Your Brother
Hitchcoc23 February 2017
This is John Ford's look at 1930's Ireland and a foolish man (Victor McLaghlan) who had no principles. He becomes tired when the IRA has expectations and leaves them. He sees his true love, a prostitute being approached by a John. She needs money to go to America, and because he is shiftless and self-centered, he turns in a former brother in the cause for twenty pounds. Once he has the money, he throws it away on drink. This is a sad film about the despair of certain Irish in a time of horrible events. McLaghlan is likable at times, but really does little that is noble.
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7/10
I didn't know what I was doing.
hitchcockthelegend12 March 2011
The Informer is directed by John Ford and adapted by Dudley Nichols from the story written by Liam O'Flaherty. It stars Victor McLaglen, Heather Angel, Preston Foster, Margot Grahame, Wallace Ford & Una O'Connor. Max Steiner scores the music and Joseph H. August is the cinematographer.

1922, the Irish War of Independence, and Gypo Nolan (McLaglen) informs on his friend Frankie McPhillip (W Ford), a prominent member if the IRA. Collecting his reward money from the "Black & Tans," Nolan plans to start a new life in America with his girlfriend Katie Madden (Grahame), but as he gets drunk and starts to flash the cash, the Republican Army start to close in on Gypo....

Some of the best reviews of his career were given to John Ford for The Informer, a film that was also a big hit at the Academy Awards, where it won for Best Director, Best Actor, Best Writing (screenplay) and Best Score. Its reputation over the decades has remained mostly positive, tho time has shown it to not be the masterpiece many lauded it as at the time. Ford directs with force, a force matched by McLalgen, and the writing is intelligent (tho it should be noted that Ford & Nichols considerably toned down the source story). The work of August nods toward German expressionism, with shadows, smog and low lights neatly making the sets actually look like 1920s Dublin. While Steiner's score is tonally correct and McLaglen is well supported by Grahame and Foster.

However, Ford's psychological study on a modern day Judas, lacks the power today that the critics felt it had on release. It at times is what it is, McLaglen getting boozed up and getting louder and louder the drunker he gets. It's only when put under pressure by the IRA that McLagen really gets to show some acting gravitas, forced to town down and show Gypo to be the unfortunate and well meaning oaf that he is, McLaglen earns his plaudits; but is it the rich characterisation it was heralded as? Debatable, and no doubt about it, this lacks the complexity and ambiguity that shows up in many of Ford's greatest film's. Absent, too, is any great dramatic thrust, particularly in regards to the finale. Still, all things considered, it's still a fine piece of work, even if it now can't hope to live up to the reputation afforded it back in the 30s. 7/10
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3/10
Dated Drama
kenjha28 December 2010
During the Irish rebellion of the 1920s, a rebel turns in one of his friends for a reward. Once regarded as a towering achievement for Ford, winning him his first Oscar, it now stands as one of his most dated films, mainly due to the terrible overacting. McLaglen is the main offender here, playing his larger-than-life drunkard so over-the-top that it's painful to watch these days. Of course, the Academy awarded him an Oscar for it and he went on to play variations on this character in numerous other Ford films, mostly Westerns. The rest of the cast is equally bad. The film is visually impressive, but it's hard to look past the melodramatics.
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