Cloak and Dagger
- APPROVED
- Year:
- 1946
- 106 min
- 169 Views
C'est moi.
I thought you'd
never show up.
We're crowding call time.
Get the piano going. This will be
a short one. I'll put it in code.
Anything sensational?
No. Some are pitchblende.
Forty carloads.
Heading North? Yeah. For Germany.
Highball. He didn't even
get the chance to sign off.
Pitchblende from Czechoslovakia.
Pitchblende from Spain.
Two hundred and fifty carloads
out of Germany in the past 30 days.
And British intelligence says they've taken
the whole output of monazite from Norway.
Our trouble is we haven't enough
people who can analyze scientific data.
Pitchblende and monazite.
I'll be out of town till tomorrow. I've
got to talk to somebody who can analyze it.
Who's there?
An old fraternity brother.
Why, Clem.
How are you?
Don't know how I am. I've been
wandering through cellars...
and breaking down doors
trying to get to you.
- Are you hiding something from me?
- No.
But what are you hiding from me?
I thought you were in the army.
To put you in your place,
I'm a colonel.
Then why the civilian
clothes? I'm in O.S.S.
Never heard of it. That's fine. We're
not supposed to get any publicity.
It's the office of
strategic services.
Around Washington we're called
the Cloak-and-Dagger boys.
Sounds romantic.
Sure. Very.
We do a lot of things, Alvah.
Intelligence work. Morale stuff.
Operations behind
the enemy lines.
Why are you telling me
all this if it's so hush-hush?
How's work
in nuclear physics these days?
So-so. Don't close up on me.
Well, it's hush-hush too, Clem-
government work.
I know. You're working on
the Manhattan project.
That's why I'm here.
What does this
mean to you?
Pitchblende's for Uranium.
Monazite's for Thorium.
We're not working with Thorium anymore.
235 has a more convenient atomic structure.
Any chance the Germans have learned
something about Thorium we don't know?
The Germans?
I wouldn't think so. But... quantities
like these aren't for the laboratory.
They're for
large-scale operations.
working on an atomic bomb too?
We've all wondered.
They got the brains.
They know as much about
nuclear fission as we do.
Well, Alvah, they are
working on an atom bomb.
Mm-hmm. Clem,
this is the first time I was
ever sorry I'm a scientist.
Why?
Look,
in a few years, we'll be able to break
up the atomic structure of this apple.
When we do that,
it will become a bomb.
The energy in this one, little apple could
pulverize this university, this whole town,
its fine hospitals,
its libraries,
its wonderful medical schools, to
say nothing of all the people in it.
But...
we still wouldn't be able
to make one, little apple.
We're running ahead of ourselves.
Society isn't ready for atomic energy.
I'm scared stiff.
For the first time, thousands of allied
scientists are working together to make what?
A bomb! But who was willing to finance science
before the war to wipe out tuberculosis?
And when are we gonna be given a
Billion Dollars to wipe out cancer?
I tell you,
we could do it in one year.
But if anybody's going to develop
the Atom bomb, you want it to be us,
not the Nazis.
Not much choice in that.
Alvah, we need
more trained men on this.
We've got to know
how far the Germans have gone.
Where they're working.
How we can stop them.
Most of our agents
aren't equipped.
They don't know
what to look for.
They're missing clues, I know.
This is a race.
It's the Germans or us.
We've got to get more
scientists into our outfit.
How about what
I'm doing here?
I'm already authorized to take
you off. You know the problem.
You're single. You can speak a little
German. But you've got to volunteer.
There was a time when I thought I'd like
to become some sort of a secret agent.
I gave it up
at the age of eight.
Okay, brother,
you're now a spy.
I've got two plane tickets
back to Washington
Can I even have time
to wind things up here?
Ordinarily we'd give you a few weeks.
I want you to take a look at this.
Know her?
Dr. Katerin Lodor,
one of the great ones.
Used to be my scientific pinup girl
before Hungary sold out to the Nazis
the center of German atomic work.
She's in Switzerland.
Since when?
About six weeks.
She came over the alps... alone.
She's been in a hospital
in Zurich with pneumonia.
A few days ago she got in touch
with the American consulate.
Said she wanted to see
one of our scientists.
You don't know
Say, if she's just out of Germany she can tell us
- this is a terrific break.
If you'd stop feeling so happy
about it and go home and pack a bag,
you could see her in
a couple of days. Okay.
I hope you find
your room satisfactory.
Danke schoen.
Very sorry, sir.
Quite all right.
Here you go.
Danke sehr.
Don't turn around.
The lady you want to see
is at the Angelo hospital.
Room 1-6-8. she's there under
the name of Mrs. Hickerty.
You may come in.
Not too long, please,
Mr. Wilson.
What is your real name,
Mr. Wilson?
Alvah Jesper.
I know your work.
Thank god you've come. You don't
know how indebted I am to you.
To me?
When people find out
what you've done,
they'll know you're not only a
great physicist, but a great woman.
Maybe. The story
isn't ended yet.
What will people think?
What will you think...
if I were to go back
to Germany? Go back?
Oh, but that isn't why you crossed
the alps or got in touch with us.
No. But you see,
I thought I'd be safe here.
I'm not. The Germans
have found me here.
Yesterday I got a letter
postmarked Zurich
I'm to go to Italy to work.
I've been collaborating
there with Polda.
Giovanni Polda?
Yes.
If I don't return,
beginning Sunday,
ten anti-nazi Hungarians are to be
taken out of concentration camps...
and shot each day.
Each day, they promise me
a letter with names.
With photographs
of the dead people.
So the Germans
are working on atomic weapons?
Italians too.
They are coordinated.
Then what would happen if you went back
and your work helped them to succeed?
What happens if I stay here?
I can't live day by day knowing that
innocent people are being shot because of me.
I'll go back.
I'll take poison.
Suppose you went back
to work with Dr. Polda?
But you met difficulties
in your work? Obstacles.
Understand?
Yes.
That's possible.
That's possible.
And if you felt strong enough for it,
you could help us, too, with information.
There are ways of
communicating? I think so.
I'll have to discuss it. Arrangements
will have to be made, and-
believe me, I would be
strong enough for that.
But you have to hurry. They've
given me only until Sunday
Before I go back,
we have to talk.
I'll need every bit
of information you have.
If you only knew how
the British set them back...
when they bombed that
It meant a delay
of months for them.
But what if you
can't arrange this?
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"Cloak and Dagger" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 25 Nov. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/cloak_and_dagger_5668>.
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