| Ingrid Bergman | ... | Lady Henrietta Flusky | |
| Joseph Cotten | ... | Sam Flusky | |
| Michael Wilding | ... | Hon. Charles Adare | |
| Margaret Leighton | ... | Milly | |
| Cecil Parker | ... | The Governor | |
| Denis O'Dea | ... | Mr. Corrigan | |
| Jack Watling | ... | Winter | |
| Harcourt Williams | ... | The Coachman | |
| John Ruddock | ... | Mr. Potter | |
| Bill Shine | ... | Mr. Banks | |
| Victor Lucas | ... | The Rev. Smiley | |
| Ronald Adam | ... | Mr. Riggs | |
| Francis De Wolff | ... | Major Wilkins (as Francis de Wolff) | |
| G.H. Mulcaster | ... | Dr. Macallister | |
| Olive Sloane | ... | Sal | |
| Maureen Delaney | ... | Flo | |
| Julia Lang | ... | Susan | |
| Betty McDermott | ... | Martha | |
| rest of cast listed alphabetically: | |||
| Ivor Barry | ... | 1st Guard in Hall (uncredited) | |
| Martin Benson | ... | Man Carrying Shrunken Head (uncredited) | |
| Ronnie Hill | ... | 2nd Guard in Hall (uncredited) | |
| Alfred Hitchcock | ... | Man at Governor's Reception (uncredited) | |
| David Keir | ... | Man Checking Invitations at Ball (uncredited) | |
| Roderick Lovell | ... | Bit Part (uncredited) | |
| Lloyd Pearson | ... | Land Agent (uncredited) | |
| Richard Turner | ... | Clerk (uncredited) | |
Directed by | |||
| Alfred Hitchcock | |||
Writing credits | ||
| John Colton | (play) and | |
| Margaret Linden | (play) | |
| Helen Simpson | (novel) | |
| Hume Cronyn | (adaptation) | |
| James Bridie | (screenplay) | |
| Peter Ustinov | uncredited & | |
| Joseph Shearing | uncredited | |
Produced by | |||
| Sidney Bernstein | .... | producer (uncredited) | |
| Alfred Hitchcock | .... | producer (uncredited) | |
Original Music by | |||
| Richard Addinsell | |||
Cinematography by | |||
| Jack Cardiff | (director of photography) | ||
Film Editing by | |||
| Bert Bates | (as A.S. Bates) | ||
Art Direction by | |||
| Thomas N. Morahan | (as Thomas Morahan) | ||
Costume Design by | |||
| Roger K. Furse | (as Roger Furse) | ||
| Julia Squire | (uncredited) | ||
Makeup Department | |||
| Charles E. Parker | .... | makeup artist (as Charles Parker) | |
| Joan Smallwood | .... | assistant hairdresser (uncredited) | |
| Neville Smallwood | .... | assistant makeup artist (uncredited) | |
Production Management | |||
| Fred Ahern | .... | production manager | |
| John Palmer | .... | unit manager | |
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director | |||
| C.R. Foster-Kemp | .... | assistant director (as C. Foster Kemp) | |
| Cliff Owen | .... | second assistant director (uncredited) | |
| John Pellatt | .... | third assistant director (uncredited) | |
Art Department | |||
| Philip Stockford | .... | set dresser | |
| Ted Clements | .... | draughtsman (uncredited) | |
| Kenneth McCallum Tait | .... | assistant art director (uncredited) | |
Sound Department | |||
| Peter Handford | .... | sound recordist | |
| A.W. Watkins | .... | sound (uncredited) | |
Camera and Electrical Department | |||
| Paul Beeson | .... | operator of camera movement | |
| Ian Craig | .... | operator of camera movement | |
| Jack Haste | .... | operator of camera movement | |
| David MacNeilly | .... | operator of camera movement | |
| Jim Dawes | .... | grip (uncredited) | |
| George Pink | .... | assistant camera (uncredited) | |
Editorial Department | |||
| Bert Rule | .... | assembly cutter (uncredited) | |
Music Department | |||
| Louis Levy | .... | musical director | |
Other crew | |||
| Joan Bridge | .... | associate technicolor color director | |
| Natalie Kalmus | .... | technicolor color director | |
| David O. Selznick | .... | actor arrangement: Mr. Cotten | |
| Peggy Singer | .... | continuity | |
| Jean Dyball | .... | assistant continuity (uncredited) | |
| Hazel Swift | .... | production secretary (uncredited) | |
| Recent Posts (updated daily) | User |
|---|---|
| The influence of painting | BiscuitEatingWench |
| The Title | morris-payne-1 |
| Anyone else fell sympathy for Milly (The Maid) | Danespina |
| DVD with English subtitles? | gourabrc |
| Full cast and crew | Company credits | External reviews |
| News articles | IMDb Crime section | IMDb UK section |
Under Capricorn, is along with Notorious, I Confess and Rear Window Hitchcocks greatest film. Under Capricorn has been greatly under appreciated mainly because it was a commercial failure and because Hitchcock talked the movie down saying that he only made it for Ingrid Bergman. The truth is that he had been working on getting it made for years, would he really put his production company under pressure on it's second project with a $2.5 million budget if he didn't care for it. Maybe part of its mixed reputation is because it's not a thriller, being a character driven movie, at just under two hours long its not you're typical Hitchcock movie. But the story is revealed in a wonderful way, with such a great romantic feeling that I'm amazed that it's not more highly thought off by the general public. If there ever was a more beautifully film movie I've never seen it. Ingrid Bergman is as she always is, brilliant; her 10-minuet scene in which she tells wilding the whole story of what happened is pure magic. Another great moment is when Bergman has locked herself in her room and wilding comes through her window. Joseph Cotton is also on top form. Really all that I've got left to say is if you haven't yet seen this film and you get the chance to don't waste that chance. I wish it would come out on DVD or video I've nearly worn my copy out.