The Odessa File

The Odessa File

Movie |

Revenge | Suicide

  • :
  • Genre(s): Drama, Thriller
  • Language(s): English
  • Director(s): Ronald Neame, Wieland Liebske, Elaine Schreyeck, Colin M. Brewer
  • Cast(s): Jon Voight, Maximilian Schell, Maria Schell, Mary Tamm, Derek Jacobi See all Cast & Crew
  • Duration: 2h 10min
  • Music: Andrew Lloyd Webber,Derek Ball,Gordon K. McCallum,Leslie Hodgson,Anthony Bowles
  • Similar To: The Bluff, The Lost Bus
  • Story:
    After reading the diary of an elderly Jewish man who committed suicide, freelance journalist Peter Miller begins to investigate the alleged sighting of a former SS-Captain who commanded a concentration camp during World War II. Miller eventually finds himself involved with the powerful organization of former SS members, called ODESSA, as well as with the Israeli secret service. Miller probes deeper and eventually discovers a link between the SS-Captain, ODESSA, and his own family.
    Full Story
7/10
IMDb

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Videos: Trailers, Teasers, Featurettes

The Odessa File - Cast

The Odessa File - Crew

STORY AND RATINGS

Story
After reading the diary of an elderly Jewish man who committed suicide, freelance journalist Peter Miller begins to investigate the alleged sighting of a former SS-Captain who commanded a concentration camp during World War II. Miller eventually finds himself involved with the powerful organization of former SS members, called ODESSA, as well as with the Israeli secret service. Miller probes deeper and eventually discovers a link between the SS-Captain, ODESSA, and his own family.
Ratings

7/10

IMDb

TRIVIA AND POPULAR DIALOGUES

Trivia

Eduard Roschmann was a real-life wanted war criminal living in South America. He became even more wanted after the book and movie, and he turned up dead, rumored to have been killed by O.D.E.S.S.A. to stop the search for him that the media had begun.

The character played by Hannes Messemer was not referred to by name in the dialogue. However, it is intended to be S.S. Gruppenführer Richard Glücks, former S.S. Inspector of Concentration Camps, who disappeared after World War II and is rumored to have been one of the founding members of O.D.E.S.S.A.

The term "O.D.E.S.S.A." stands for "Organisation der ehemaligen S.S. Angehörigen", which translates to: Organization of former S.S. members.

One scene took place in the well-known Salvator beer hall in Munich. Ex-soldiers were used as extras to take part in a rally of former S.S. men, with the beer running freely during the scenes to authenticate the enthusiasm.

The supporting cast was mostly German. Most of the character actors and actresses were major movie and theatre personalities of the German stage and screen. The English-speaking players were given special coaching by dialogue director Osman Ragheb to acquire German accents which would be identical to those of the native actors and actresses. Not only did Jon Voight and Mary Tamm have to learn to use the accent, but had to do it with North German dialect nuances because of their characters' Hamburg origins in the story.

Popular Dialogues

"Peter Miller: Do you remember a man with the name of Tauber? Eduard Roschmann: Who? Peter Miller: Salomon Tauber. He was German and Jewish. One of your prisoners at Riga. Try to think, Roschmann. Eduard Roschmann: I can't remember all the prisoners' names. Peter Miller: He died in Hamburg last November. He gassed himself. Are you listening? Eduard Roschmann: If I must. Peter Miller: Yes, you must. Eduard Roschmann: All right, I'm listening. Peter Miller: He left behind a diary. Eduard Roschmann: Is that why you came? Because of the diary of some old Jew? A dead man's diary is no evidence. Peter Miller: There was a date in the diary I want to remind you of. Something that happened at Riga docks... on October 11,1944. Eduard Roschmann: So what? The man struck me. He disobeyed my orders. I had the right to commandeer that ship. Peter Miller: Was that the man you killed? Eduard Roschmann: How should I know? It was 20 years ago. Peter Miller: Was that the man? Eduard Roschmann: All right! So that was the man. So what? Peter Miller: That was my father! Eduard Roschmann: Your father. So you didn't come about the Jews at all. I understand. Peter Miller: No, you don't understand! What you and your kind did to all those people sickened the whole of mankind. But I'm here for my father. Eduard Roschmann: How could you possibly know from that diary that man was your father? Peter Miller: October 11, the same date, the same place. The Knights Cross with the oak leaf cluster, the highest award for bravery in the field. Given to very few of the rank of captain. The same rank, the same decoration, the same man! Eduard Roschmann: I don't even remember. You're not going to kill me. You can't. You called me a butcher. Wouldn't killing me make you a butcher, too? What's the difference?"

"Peter Miller: [Peter Miller's first lines; he pulls to the curb after hearing about the assassination of John F. Kennedy on the radio] Events that can change history sometimes hang on tiny chances. If I hadn't pulled to the curb, I wouldn't have caught the traffic light, nor seen the ambulance, never have heard of Salomon Tauber or Eduard Roschmann. Nor got involved with the agents of Israel, or with the sinister and deadly men behind the Odessa. That night I was just a reporter with a nose for a possible story."