Cloak and Dagger (WWII - 1946)


Cloak and Dagger is a 1946 film directed by Fritz Lang, starring Gary Cooper. Like 13 Rue Madeleine, it is a tribute to Office of Strategic Services (OSS) operations in occupied Europe during World War II. The title is based on the 1946 non fiction book Cloak and Dagger: The Secret Story of O.S.S. by Corey Ford and Alastair MacBain. Former OSS agent E. Michael Burke acted as technical advisor.

As planned by Lang, the film had a different ending. Cooper lead a group of American paratroopers into Southern Germany to discover the remains of an underground factory, the bodies of dead concentration camp workers and evidence the factory was working on nuclear weapons. Cooper remarks that the factory may have been relocated to Spain or Argentina and launched a diatribe saying This is the Year One of the Atomic Age and God help us if we think we can keep this secret from the World!Producer Milton Sperling who had frequently quarreled with Lang on the set thought the final scene ridiculous as the audience knew the Germans had no nuclear capacity.



A 1950 NBC radio show of the same title based on Ford and MacBain's book lasted 26 episodes. Cloak and Dagger began with actor Raymond Edward Johnson asking "Are you willing to undertake a dangerous mission for the United States knowing in advance you may never return alive?"

Directed by Fritz Lang
Produced by Milton Sperling
Written by Corey Ford, Alastair MacBain (book)
Boris Ingster, John Larkin (story)
Ring Lardner Jr.
Albert Maltz
Starring Gary Cooper
Lilli Palmer
Music by Max Steiner
Cinematography Sol Polito
Editing by Christian Nyby
Distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures
United States Pictures
Release date(s) 28 September 1946
Running time 106 minutes
Country United States
Language English