Night Train to Munich

1940 British thriller about Nazis, spys, and a Nazi spy.

This film contains examples the following tropes:

 * Beauty Is Never Tarnished: Even in a concentration camp, Anna's appearance suffers nothing except a little tousled hair
 * Bottomless Magazines
 * Cannot Convey Sarcasm: Invoked. When Schwab says, "This is a fine country to live in!" he gets in trouble for treason. He weasels out by saying that he actually said, "This is a fine country to live in!" He is advised against making statements that could be construed two ways in the future.
 * Comically Missing the Point: When a British man visiting Germany is informed that the news stand doesn't sell British magazines, he says, "Sold out, I suppose?"
 * Dressing As the Enemy
 * Follow That Car
 * Ghostapo: Parodied. John Fredericks: Occultist and Ophthalmic Surgeon.
 * Herr Doktor
 * High Class Glass: Invoked. Randall wears a monocle when he disguises himself as a Nazi.
 * I Have Many Names: Dick Randall has at least two aliases
 * La Résistance
 * Mugged for Disguise
 * Only a Flesh Wound: Of the shot in the shoulder variety
 * The Mole
 * Reverse Mole:
 * Gus Bennett/Dick Randall goes undercover as a German officer
 * Take That: Gone With the Wind is shown being sold on a shelf right next to Mein Kampf. Also serves as a Historical in Joke, because the book was very popular in Nazi Germany for all the wrong reasons.
 * Translation Convention: Czechs and Germans all speek English to each other
 * The Reason You Suck Speech: In the camp, Karl gives one of these to some of the guards.
 * Those Two British Guys
 * Those Wacky Nazis