The Stranger's Hand | |
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Directed by | Mario Soldati |
Written by | Giorgio Bassani Guy Elmes |
Based on | The Stranger's Hand by Graham Greene |
Produced by | Angelo Rizzoli Graham Greene Peter Moore John Stafford |
Starring | Trevor Howard Alida Valli Richard Basehart |
Cinematography | Enzo Serafin |
Edited by | Tom Simpson Leslie Hogdson Leo Catozzo |
Music by | Nino Rota Alessandro Cicognini |
Production companies | Milo Film Rizzoli Film Independent Film Producers |
Distributed by | British Lion Films |
Release date |
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Running time | 85 minutes |
Countries | Italy United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Budget | £164,200[1] |
The Stranger's Hand (Italian: La mano dello straniero) is a 1954 British-Italian thriller drama film directed by Mario Soldati and starring Trevor Howard, Alida Valli and Richard Basehart. An international co-production, it is based on the draft novel with the same name written by Graham Greene.[2] The plot follows the son of a British MI5 agent kidnapped in Venice by agents of Yugoslavia as he searches for his father.
The first two chapters of The Stranger's Hand had been entered by Greene anonymously under a pseudonym to a competition in the New Statesman to write a book in the style of Graham Greene – a competition in which Greene was amused to win second prize. Soldati had seen the chapters and persuaded Greene to complete the novella to make the basis for a film. Greene expanded it to 30 pages of a "film story", on which Giorgio Bassani and Guy Elmes completed the screenplay.[3]