The Journey (1959) - Turner Classic Movies

The Journey


2h 3m 1959
The Journey

Brief Synopsis

A Communist officer falls hard for a married woman trying to escape from Hungary.

Film Details

Genre
Drama
Political
Romance
Release Date
Feb 1959
Premiere Information
New York opening: 19 Feb 1959
Production Company
Alby Productions, S. A.
Distribution Company
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Corp.
Country
Austria and United States
Location
Vienna, Austria; Border, Austria-Hungary; Vienna,Austria; Vienna ,Austria; Vienna -- Rosenhuegal Studios,Austria; Vienna--Rosenhuegel Studios,Austria

Technical Specs

Duration
2h 3m
Sound
Mono
Color
Color (Metrocolor)
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.96 : 1
Film Length
11,284ft (14 reels)

Synopsis

In 1956 Hungary, a national uprising against Communist rule results in Soviet military occupation. At the Budapest airport, several foreigners anxiously waiting to depart are informed that flights have been canceled, but they will be transported to Vienna by bus. British television representative Hugh Deverill is surprised to find acquaintance Lady Diana Ashmore among the waiting passengers. Diana hopes to keep secret that she is traveling with Hungarian national Paul Kedes, who is hiding a severe wound from a street battle and is traveling under an assumed British identity. Although weak and exhausted, Paul insists that Diana disassociate herself from him in the event that he is detained. As the bus departs Budapest, Diana startles Hugh by confiding that she is divorcing her respected British husband. After the bus passes a Soviet roadblock, Paul faints and Diana rushes to his aid, raising Hugh's suspicions. Further down the road, the bus is halted by a group of Hungarian freedom fighters led by the steely Eva. Allowed to proceed, the bus soon arrives in Mosen, the last Hungarian town before the Austrian border. The officer in charge of the border check point, Major Surov, confiscates the passengers' passports and informs them that they must be individually questioned before being allowed to cross the border. Upon preliminary questioning, Surov is struck by Diana's poise and beauty, and also notes Paul's veiled hostility. At the local hotel, proprietor Csepege welcomes the travelers and, at the major's orders, places the men in quarters apart from the women. Sharing a room with Simon Avron and Teklel Hafouli, Paul collapses into bed with a high fever. Hugh warns Diana that if Paul is wanted by the authorities, Diana's association with him may place all the bus passengers in jeopardy. When the others go downstairs to dine, Diana slips into Paul's room to rebind his wound and Paul begs her not to place herself in danger. Surov attends the group's dinner and notices Diana's late entrance and Paul's absence. When gunfire outside interrupts the meal, Surov wonders why the Hungarians hate the Soviets. After dinner, Surov's impervious demeanor is shaken by the death of young freedom fighter killed just outside the hotel. That night, when Paul falls into a delirium and speaks an unfamiliar language, Simon awakens Hugh to express his and Teklel's fear that Paul is not British. Roused by the murmur of the men's voices, Diana overhears their discussion, then follows Hugh downstairs. Over tea, Diana reveals that Paul is a Hungarian biologist, whom she met and fell in love with in England years earlier. After Diana ended their relationship and married someone else, Paul returned to Hungary where his correspondence to England regarding her prompted government suspicion that he was a spy. Arrested and tortured mercilessly, Paul spent five years in prison and was just released. Still in love with Paul and wracked with guilt for his suffering, Diana is determined to get him out of the country. The following morning at breakfast, Csepege announces new regulations about reporting all Hungarian nationals and surrendering arms. Led by Simon, the men demand that Diana turn Paul over to Surov, but she refuses. When Surov arrives with forms for the passengers to fill out, he notices Paul's continued absence, but no one in the group gives him away. Diana brazenly offers to fill out Paul's form, then later takes it upstairs to him to sign. Surov follows and in a moment alone with Paul, accidentally finds and confiscates his gun. Later when Paul and Diana realize the gun is missing, Paul declares they must leave immediately. Diana asks Csepege how Paul might be smuggled across the border and he directs her to a contact at the fish market. After making the arrangements to escape that night, Diana is picked up by the military police and Surov. Taking Diana to a deserted brewery, Surov shows her Paul's gun and demands to know why Diana has been lying. Diana is startled when Surov admits that although he can arrest Paul, Diana's presence has forced him to hesitate and doubt his previous unquestioning attitude. That evening at dinner, Surov assures the anxious passengers that their trip will likely resume the following day and demands that the occasion be festive. Csepege secretly advises Diana that the escape plan is confirmed, but Diana is detained when Surov drunkenly insists that they dance together. Diana finally flees the dining room, but on her way to join Paul, Surov stops her to apologize for his behavior and to return Paul's gun as a farewell gift. Moments later, Diana joins Paul and a guide in a small boat in the canal. As the boat floats by the guard tower, Surov arrives on horseback and Diana and Paul are caught. Paul struggles to defend Diana, insisting that she is not responsible. Back at the hotel, the remaining passengers are placed under house arrest and several wonder why Diana and Paul did not inform them of their escape. Back at his office, Surov files his report on Paul's arrest, ignoring Diana's emotional pleas to spare Paul. Later, Surov visits Paul in jail and is affected by his courage and humanity despite his bitter experiences. Meanwhile at the hotel, the passengers, led by pregnant American Margie Rhinelander, accuse Diana of instigating their difficulties. Margie declares that everyone has noticed Surov's attraction to Diana and bluntly encourages Diana to take advantage of it to help save them. While riding back to the hotel from the jail, Surov's horse is shot out from under him by Eva hiding in a tree. Distressed, Surov returns to the military headquarters, but is unable to kill his suffering horse. When Diana arrives, Surov bitterly chastises her naïve idealism, then admits that her influence has ruined him. When Diana confesses that she came at the behest of the others, Surov is outraged, then demands that Diana confess that she returns his feelings. Despite sharing a passionate kiss with Surov, Diana departs. Early the next morning, the group, minus Paul, returns to the bus. A few miles away, as the relieved passengers disembark at a small bridge leading to Austria, Surov drives up in a jeep with Paul. Diana rushes to thank Surov, but he assures her that he has acted only to clear his conscience. Moments after Diana and Paul are welcomed to Austria by the border guards, shots ring out as Surov is killed by Eva.

Photo Collections

The Journey - Publicity Stills
Here are a few photos taken to publicize MGM's The Journey (1959), starring Deborah Kerr and Yul Brynner. Publicity stills were specially-posed photos, usually taken off the set, for purposes of publicity or reference for promotional artwork.

Videos

Movie Clip

Journey, The (1959) -- (Movie Clip) I Even Mystify Myself Yul Brynner as clever Russian commander Surov isn’t buying the cover story from Lady Ashmore (Deborah Kerr) that Jason Robards Jr. is Britisher Flemyng, who’s just feeling ill, and not her former lover, a Hungarian dissident shot in an escape attempt, trying to get out of the country during the 1956 uprising, in The Journey, 1959.
Journey, The (1959) -- (Movie Clip) Russian Clocks Sometimes Very Slow After credits establishing Budapest, during the 1956 Hungarian uprising, Robert Morley the English correspondent stranded in an airport, with fellows David Kossoff, Gèrard Oury and E.G. Marshall, Russian-born Anatole Litvak producing and directing, in The Journey, 1959, starring Deborah Kerr, Yul Brynner and Jason Robards Jr.
Journey, The (1959) -- (Movie Clip) Wanna Play War? Excepting one earlier shot, the feature debut of Jason Robards Jr., his character’s identity not quite revealed, except that he’s traveling with English aristocrat Deborah Kerr, who’s recognized by journalist Deverill (Robert Morley), then meeting American E.G. Marshall and family (sons Flip Mark and “Ronny” Howard, wife Anne Jackson), all stranded at the Budapest airport during the 1956 Hungarian uprising, in Anatole Litvak’s The Journey, 1959.
Journey, The (1959) -- (Movie Clip) You Think I'm The Devil! Yul Brynner is Surov, Russian commander of a Hungarian town during the 1956 uprising, holding forth with temporarily detained guests, journalist Robert Morley, American mom Anne Jackson, Deborah Kerr as a socialite whom we know is helping a dissident escape, then with Anouk Aimee, secret leader of a rebel band, in Anatole Litvak’s The Journey, 1959.
Journey, The (1959) -- (Movie Clip) We'd Better Speak English Robert Morley is the English journalist leading a group of foreigners escaping Hungary by bus during the 1956 uprising, Yul Brynner the just-introduced Russian district commander, Anne Jackson and E.G. Marshall an American couple (Ron Howard one of their sons!), Deborah Kerr as Lady Ashmore, traveling officially alone, in The Journey, 1959.

Trailer

Promo

Film Details

Genre
Drama
Political
Romance
Release Date
Feb 1959
Premiere Information
New York opening: 19 Feb 1959
Production Company
Alby Productions, S. A.
Distribution Company
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Corp.
Country
Austria and United States
Location
Vienna, Austria; Border, Austria-Hungary; Vienna,Austria; Vienna ,Austria; Vienna -- Rosenhuegal Studios,Austria; Vienna--Rosenhuegel Studios,Austria

Technical Specs

Duration
2h 3m
Sound
Mono
Color
Color (Metrocolor)
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.96 : 1
Film Length
11,284ft (14 reels)

Articles

The Journey


The Journey (1959), directed by Anatole Litvak, is a political-sexual triangle set against the backdrop of the failed Hungarian revolution of 1956. Litvak, who was known in film circles for his anti-establishment politics, wasted no time translating this story to the big screen. The picture came out in 1959, when the events depicted were still relatively fresh in viewers' minds. Litvak also loaded the deck in his favor by casting Yul Brynner as a Russian checkpoint commander who falls for a beautiful Westerner (Deborah Kerr). Brynner was a sex symbol at the time, due mainly to his Oscar-winning performance, also opposite Kerr, in The King and I (1956.)

George Tabori's screenplay is a mixture of revolution and romance. A group of passengers from a variety of countries (such as the U.S., Britain, Israel, and France) are stranded at the Budapest airport during the Hungarian uprising. The Russian Army has grounded all civilian planes, so the passengers are forced to journey by bus to the Austrian frontier, a distance of about 100 miles. At the last checkpoint on the Russian border, Major Surov (Brynner) stops the party.

Initially, it seems Surov is only checking their passports and exit permits, but it soon becomes clear that he has other motives. A man named Paul Kedes (Jason Robards, in his film debut; child actor Ronny Howard also makes his second big screen appearance here) is traveling with Lady Diana Ashmore (Kerr.) Surov suspects Kedes of being a Hungarian rebel, and he's also developing feelings for Ashmore. Before it's over, he'll have to reconsider his politics to save the woman he loves.

The evocative settings of The Journey can be traced directly to Litvak's visual expertise. His films were never as iconoclastic as his personal worldview, but he did insist on an almost documentary-like shooting style years before the approach became popular in commercial cinema. Even in the 1930s, he utilized realistic sound effects and street noises. He used them, he said, as "support for a film's images, heightening their pictorial values, underscoring their visual beauty." He also favored tracking shots that maintained continuity throughout a scene.

Litvak had an interesting background, although, like Brynner, he was apt to invent his biography anew when asked for details. Little is known, for instance, about his early life in Russia, except that he fled to Berlin in 1925. (He claimed to have been one of the many editors on Abel Gance's legendary epic, Napoleon (1927), although this has never been confirmed.) He left for Paris when Hitler rose to power in the 1930s, then landed in Hollywood, where he directed The Woman I Love in 1937.

That's a treasure trove of verifiable information compared to Brynner's "story." Depending on what article you read, he was either a full-blooded gypsy or the illegitimate son of a gypsy and a wealthy Russian. He also claimed to have studied philosophy at the Sorbonne in Paris. Other times, he claimed to have worked as a gypsy singer, or as a trapeze artist in a circus. Not surprisingly, he seldom pointed out that, in 1950, he was the director of a children's television puppet show called Life With Snarky. Renegade gypsy singer-trapeze artists don't direct puppet shows, especially on local TV.

Directed by: Anatole Litvak
Screenplay: George Tabori
Produced by: Anatole Litvak
Art Direction: Isabella Schlichting and Werner Schlichting
Cinematography: Jack Hildyard
Editing: Dorothy Spencer
Music: Georges Auric
Principal Cast: Deborah Kerr (Lady Diana Ashmore), Yul Brynner (Major Surov), Jason Robards (Paul Kedes), Robert Morley (Hugh Deverill), E.G. Marshall (Harold Rhinelander), Anne Jackson (Margie Rhinelander), Ronny Howard (Billy Rhinelander), Anouk Aimee (Eva).
C-126m. Letterboxed. Closed captioning.

by Paul Tatara
The Journey

The Journey

The Journey (1959), directed by Anatole Litvak, is a political-sexual triangle set against the backdrop of the failed Hungarian revolution of 1956. Litvak, who was known in film circles for his anti-establishment politics, wasted no time translating this story to the big screen. The picture came out in 1959, when the events depicted were still relatively fresh in viewers' minds. Litvak also loaded the deck in his favor by casting Yul Brynner as a Russian checkpoint commander who falls for a beautiful Westerner (Deborah Kerr). Brynner was a sex symbol at the time, due mainly to his Oscar-winning performance, also opposite Kerr, in The King and I (1956.) George Tabori's screenplay is a mixture of revolution and romance. A group of passengers from a variety of countries (such as the U.S., Britain, Israel, and France) are stranded at the Budapest airport during the Hungarian uprising. The Russian Army has grounded all civilian planes, so the passengers are forced to journey by bus to the Austrian frontier, a distance of about 100 miles. At the last checkpoint on the Russian border, Major Surov (Brynner) stops the party. Initially, it seems Surov is only checking their passports and exit permits, but it soon becomes clear that he has other motives. A man named Paul Kedes (Jason Robards, in his film debut; child actor Ronny Howard also makes his second big screen appearance here) is traveling with Lady Diana Ashmore (Kerr.) Surov suspects Kedes of being a Hungarian rebel, and he's also developing feelings for Ashmore. Before it's over, he'll have to reconsider his politics to save the woman he loves. The evocative settings of The Journey can be traced directly to Litvak's visual expertise. His films were never as iconoclastic as his personal worldview, but he did insist on an almost documentary-like shooting style years before the approach became popular in commercial cinema. Even in the 1930s, he utilized realistic sound effects and street noises. He used them, he said, as "support for a film's images, heightening their pictorial values, underscoring their visual beauty." He also favored tracking shots that maintained continuity throughout a scene. Litvak had an interesting background, although, like Brynner, he was apt to invent his biography anew when asked for details. Little is known, for instance, about his early life in Russia, except that he fled to Berlin in 1925. (He claimed to have been one of the many editors on Abel Gance's legendary epic, Napoleon (1927), although this has never been confirmed.) He left for Paris when Hitler rose to power in the 1930s, then landed in Hollywood, where he directed The Woman I Love in 1937. That's a treasure trove of verifiable information compared to Brynner's "story." Depending on what article you read, he was either a full-blooded gypsy or the illegitimate son of a gypsy and a wealthy Russian. He also claimed to have studied philosophy at the Sorbonne in Paris. Other times, he claimed to have worked as a gypsy singer, or as a trapeze artist in a circus. Not surprisingly, he seldom pointed out that, in 1950, he was the director of a children's television puppet show called Life With Snarky. Renegade gypsy singer-trapeze artists don't direct puppet shows, especially on local TV. Directed by: Anatole Litvak Screenplay: George Tabori Produced by: Anatole Litvak Art Direction: Isabella Schlichting and Werner Schlichting Cinematography: Jack Hildyard Editing: Dorothy Spencer Music: Georges Auric Principal Cast: Deborah Kerr (Lady Diana Ashmore), Yul Brynner (Major Surov), Jason Robards (Paul Kedes), Robert Morley (Hugh Deverill), E.G. Marshall (Harold Rhinelander), Anne Jackson (Margie Rhinelander), Ronny Howard (Billy Rhinelander), Anouk Aimee (Eva). C-126m. Letterboxed. Closed captioning. by Paul Tatara

Quotes

Trivia

Notes

The following prologue appears in the onscreen credits: "The action of this story takes place between Budapest, the capital of Hungary, and the Austro-Hungarian border, where the film was actually photographed. The time is November, 1956, during the tragic days of the Hungarian uprising." The opening and closing cast credits differ in order. A January 1957 Hollywood Reporter news item states that the idea for The Journey was based on an untitled story by French writer Joseph Kessel. An August 1957 item in the Los Angeles Times reported that Ingrid Bergman would star in the film.
       Although the film's credits state, "produced at Wien Film Studios, in Vienna, Austria," news items specify that the film was partially shot at the Rosenhuegel Studio in Vienna. According to a February 1959 Variety article, producer-director Anatole Litvak indicated that the Soviet government had attempted unofficially to pressure the Austrian government to stop the production of The Journey. Litvak also noted that the film had been subject to severe criticism in the Communist press.
       The film marked the screen debut of Jason Robards, Jr. (1892-1963), the son of character actor Jason Robards (1892-1963). Although Ron Howard had appeared in an unbilled part in the 1956 Top Pictures' film Frontier Woman, The Journey marked his first credited appearance; he was billed as Ronny Howard. For more information on the origins of the 1956 Hungarian uprising, please refer to the note for Allied Artists' 1958 film, The Beast of Budapest.

Miscellaneous Notes

Released in United States Winter February 1959

Ron Howard makes his feature film debut at 5-years old.

Released in United States Winter February 1959