Sabotage (1937)
Sabotage (1937)
Plot.
Where to Watch.
Currently Sabotage is available for streaming online, rent, buy or watch for free on: Classix, Max, Plex, Plex Player, Plex Channel, Tubi TV, Criterion Channel, Apple TV, Amazon Video, The Film Detective, Max Amazon Channel, The Roku Channel, Freevee, Kanopy, Public Domain Movies, Popflick
Streaming in:🇺🇸 United States
This Movie Is About.
Cast & Crew.
Sylvia Sidney
Mrs. Verloc
Oskar Homolka
Karl Verloc--Her Husband
Desmond Tester
Stevie
John Loder
Detective Sgt. Ted Spencer
Joyce Barbour
Renee
Matthew Boulton
Superintendent Talbot
S. J. Warmington
Hollingshead
William Dewhurst
The Professor
Clare Greet
Mrs. Jones (uncredited)
Pamela Bevan
Miss Chatham's Daughter
Aubrey Mather
Greengrocer (uncredited)
Austin Trevor
Monocle Man (uncredited)
E. V. H. Emmett
Writer
Peter Bull
Michaelis - Conspirator
Charles Hawtrey
Studious Youngster (uncredited)
Alfred Hitchcock
Director
Joseph Conrad
Writer
Martita Hunt
The Professor's Daughter (uncredited)
Charles Bennett
Writer
Torin Thatcher
Mr. Verloc's Visitor (uncredited)
Ian Hay
Writer
Helen Simpson
Writer
Bernard Knowles
Cinematographer
Walt Disney
Thanks
Media.
Details.
Wiki.
Sabotage, released in the United States as The Woman Alone, is a 1936 British espionage thriller film directed by Alfred Hitchcock starring Sylvia Sidney, Oskar Homolka, and John Loder. It is loosely based on Joseph Conrad's 1907 novel The Secret Agent, about a woman who discovers that her husband, the owner of a London movie theatre, is a terrorist agent.Sabotage should not be confused with Hitchcock's film Secret Agent, which was also released in 1936, but which instead is loosely based on two stories in the 1927 collection Ashenden: Or the British Agent by W. Somerset Maugham. It also should not be confused with Hitchcock's unrelated 1942 American film Saboteur.
In 2017, a poll of 150 actors, directors, writers, producers and critics for Time Out magazine ranked the film 44th best British film ever. In 2021, The Daily Telegraph ranked the film at No. 3 on its list of "The 100 best British films of all time".