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The Informer

Screening on Film
Directed by John Ford.
With Victor McLaglen, Heather Angel, Preston Foster.
US, 1935, 35mm, color, 91 min.

This was the film that, in his eighteenth year directing, made John Ford famous, winning Oscars for Best Picture, Best Direction, Best Screenplay (Dudley Nichols), Best Music (Max Steiner). It’s a still enormously envigorating adaptation of the Liam O’Flaherty novel about a Dublin lowlife, Gippo (Victor McLaglen, another deserved Oscar), who sells out his revolutionary pal to the police for a handful of money, which he promptly drinks away with his pals. The pub-crawling scenes are precious ones, and Ford is effective getting the feel of life among the IRA. This is one of Ford’s most heavily expressionist works, and among the most overtly Catholic.

Part of film series

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John Ford:
A Major Retrospective

Other film series with this film

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Classic Ford.
A John Ford Retrospective, Part I

Current and upcoming film series

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The Reincarnations of Delphine Seyrig

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Rosine Mbakam, 2025 McMillan-Stewart Fellow