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  1. Drama, Thriller, Romance. Rating: 5 (from 1 vote) Review: Dr Philip Ritter ( Paul Henreid) is a plastic surgeon who conducts his business with great responsibility; for example, when an older lady he has seen and treated before with cosmetic operations comes to see him yet again, he tells her that he is not going to carry out any more surgery ...

  2. Stolen Face was released in the United States by Lippert Pictures, whose chief, Robert Lippert, currently had an agreement with the British company Hammer Films to distribute each other's movies on either side of the Atlantic. Lippert hired Henreid and Scott (the latter on a loan-out from Hal Wallis), and paid their salaries and expenses, but the production itself was paid for by Hammer Films ...

  3. Lizabeth Scott has "A Stolen Face" and also has the face that was stolen in this 1952 film also starring Paul Henreid and directed by Terence Fisher. Scott plays a beautiful concert pianist, Alice Brent, who meets Dr. Philip Ritter (Henreid), a plastic surgeon, while he's on vacation. They fall in love, but she leaves suddenly. She's involved with her manager and rather than confront the ...

  4. STOLEN FACE. Directed by. Terence Fisher. United Kingdom, 1952. Drama, Film noir. 72. Synopsis. A plastic surgeon has a brief fling with a concert pianist, then she leaves him to go back to her previous boyfriend. In order to “keep” her, he operates on a patient—a female criminal on the run—and changes her face to duplicate his former ...

  5. Stolen Face is included as an extra on Icon Home Entertainment's The Mummy Blu-ray.: Also available in VCI's Hammer Film Noir Collector's Set, Vol. 1-3 which includes Bad Blonde (1953) Man Bait (1952) A Stolen Face (1952) - Blackout (1954) Gambler and the Lady (1952) - Heat Wave (1954) but BEWARE the packaging is circumspect - a large case with three discs stacked immediately on top of one ...

  6. The Stolen Face. The Stolen Face (German: Das gestohlene Gesicht) is a 1930 German crime film directed by Philipp Lothar Mayring and Erich Schmidt, and starring Hans Otto, Friedl Haerlin and Max Adalbert. [1] The film's sets were designed by the art director Werner Schlichting. It was shot on location in Berlin and Hamburg .

  7. A plastic surgeon has a brief fling with a concert pianist, then she leaves him to go back to her previous boyfriend. In order to “keep” her, he operates on a patient—a female criminal on the run—and changes her face to duplicate his former lovers. Trouble ensues when the pianist returns to him.