

Peters - the scene where he passionately embraces French francs is one of his best ever! The last half hour or so belong to these two screen gems, Lorre and Greenstreet, and it's very exciting. Sydney Greenstreet gives a performance as big as he is as Mr. Lorre is just great, becoming more and more worried and confused as he is drawn deeper into Dimitrios' adventures. In the title role, Zachary Scott is appropriately both attractive and slithery as a man constantly eluding those out to get him. "The Mask of Dimitrios" captures a European flavor with its international cast and creative sets, and director Jean Negulesco keeps the action moving.

Peters (Greenstreet) who has some startling information.and a plan. One of these is a nightclub owner (Emerson), who owns a nightclub in Sofia another is a police detective another a spy. Dimitrios is a con man, a thief, a blackmailer, and a spy for hire, and his victims tell their stories in a series of flashbacks. The more he learns about this man, the more fascinated he becomes, and he smells a great story. Though never leaving the back lot of Warners, the film takes writer Cornelius Leyden (Lorre) through Istanbul, Athens, Sofia, Geneva, Belgrade and Paris, following the life and career of an intriguing figure - Dimitrios - whose dead body Leyden has just seen in the morgue.

And as always, they deliver, in "The Mask of Dimitrios" starring Zachary Scott, Sydney Greenstreet, Peter Lorre, and Faye Emerson. It's wartime and Warners is short of those hot, young leading men, so they bring on one of the all-time great screen odd couples - Sydney and Peter - to work their magic.
