The Hangman Waits - This 1947 semi-documentary style featurette shot around the News of the World press, is a story of the attempts to apprehend the perpetrator of several grisly murders. A ... Read allThe Hangman Waits - This 1947 semi-documentary style featurette shot around the News of the World press, is a story of the attempts to apprehend the perpetrator of several grisly murders. A fascinating film produced by Five Star Films at Viking Studios Kensington using the medium... Read allThe Hangman Waits - This 1947 semi-documentary style featurette shot around the News of the World press, is a story of the attempts to apprehend the perpetrator of several grisly murders. A fascinating film produced by Five Star Films at Viking Studios Kensington using the mediums of the Press and the cinema. Good historic scenes of the News of the World Printing Plan... Read all
- Old Woman in Crowd outside Queens Theatre
- (as Vi Kailey)
- Motorist Giving Lift
- (uncredited)
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- Writer
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Featured reviews
The story itself is nothing special, there are no real twists in it, no stand-out performances. The editing is iffy at best, much of the dialogue is unintelligible due to the low quality.
But this is worth putting up with for two specific reasons. The first is the location photography. Filmed in and around Fleet Street itself, we see numerous rather artistically framed shots of a bomb-damaged London. Indeed, 20 years later, London was still recovering from the damage inflicted by the Luftwaffe.
The second reason was quite unexpected and one which earned the killer a degree of sympathy from me. Whilst taking refuge in a church, he is offered a chance to play the organ. As this takes place, we see his mind drift back to happier times when he and the usherette were courting. For once in his otherwise miserable life, he was happy. He felt part of the human race. And then she ripped that away from him, presumably by giving him the elbow.
It doesn't excuse his actions (or his subsequent action) but it did add a dimension to his character I didn't expect.
I don't know if the ending was some sort of homage to the Keystone Cops or not but that's what it reminded me in.
We do see the killer's face right at the end - and those who are acquainted with "Dead Of Night" may recognise him.
Oh - and I love the soundtrack that's used throughout. Reminds me in "Carnival Of Souls".
It's a fairly experimental thriller directed by a fellow named A. Barr-Smith, who directed, produced and wrote a few movies around this time. He was born in 1905, he was Australian, and that's about the limit of knowledge about him on the Internet. His technique here is advanced, as if someone were to apply early Academician techniques to a murder mystery. It works, although erratically, because a loud and irrelevant score by Albert Ferber demands the viewer's attention. Still, the editing technique works in building suspense, as we see peoples' reactions more than the action, and parts of the performers, as if they are victims of the murderer. Over all, I found it unsatisfactory because of its inconsistent pacing, but it definitely points the way to something that might have been interesting.
John Le Meseurier makes his first screen appearance in an uncredited bit.
What can I say? Well apart from the terrible acting, probably because most of the cast weren't pro actors, the writing and direction were bad as well. Most of it was quite comical, shades of the Keystone cops in a chase sequence with half a dozen policemen hanging off the sides.
A lot of padding with footage of trains running back and forth, then the chase sequence up the stair, and up the stairs and yet more running up the stairs.
Nice to see a very young, uncredited John Le Mesurier with a couple of lines, if you don't recognise the face his voice is unmissable. Filmed around the streets of London, still very heavily bomb damaged, makes it worth watching.
Don't expect anything special but worth an hour or so of your time.
By the way, who let the cat out on the piano, the music soundtrack was awful.
The Hangman Waits is an account of a manhunt, but told in very striking fashion. It is, I'd suggest - and one hesitates to use the term so readily in such an obscure context - the work of a poverty row auteur: the director, producer and writer being the same person, one A Bar-Smith, apparently his only full length directing job. A lonely review on IMDb points out that this film "looks and feels as though it was made at the dawn of talking pictures with some stilted performances, erratic editing and simplistic storyline...". That's one view.
It certainly seems a throwback to earlier times with dialogue playing a constant second to visuals and sound - and in fact it is 6 minutes in before any dialogue is spoken. Even the police are presented at one point Keystone-cops style, manning the running boards of cars to the final showdown, in a couple of remarkable 'frozen' shots, the careful framing of which, I'd suggest, indicates surely a deliberate stylistic strategy on the part of the director rather than clumsiness. I'd argue that like another favourite of mine, White Zombie, the anachronistic styling gives the film a unique feel, and by using a distinctive mode of storytelling, it turns its austere production values to advantage. The editing is not erratic either: in fact it is at some points quite deliberately structured, such as during the suspenseful, Hitchcockian opening scenes. In fact, dialogue issues apart, The Hangman Waits is striking on several counts throughout, including no less than 3 montage sequences, and a unique score featuring piano and organ instrumentation (at times reminding me of that for Peeping Tom). The killer's face is not revealed until the last few sequences; instead the film contains several interesting minor characters and incidents, which go by way of compensating for the enigmatic man on the run at the centre of the plot. The involvement of the News of the World is obvious with some effective location shooting in Fleet Street, but the view of journalists and reporters is not rose-tinted. The final montage sequence is the most interesting, creating an almost stream-of-consciousness effect as the killer recalls moments of his romantic past as the organ plays a canzona.
Some will find little in the film; others I hope will pause and discover it's avant-garde qualities, seen for the first time in a generation or so, in this release with all of the surprise and delight I did. I certainly watched Bar-Smith's work open mouthed.
It has just appeared for the first time on a double feature UK DVD, albeit in a less than perfect transfer.
(Somebody involved in 'The Hangman Waits' probably also used to attend the Film Society during the twenties, since the outdoor scenes are slickly edited together to a silent-style piano & organ score by someone called Albert Ferber that one user has already compared to Brian Easdale's for 'Peeping Tom'.)
The interior scenes depicting the offices of the 'News of the World' and at Scotland Yard are by contrast rendered almost inaudible by lousy sound recording, so one has to strain to catch the grisly details of the Victoria trunk murder. However it eventually livens up with an energetic climactic chase through the Fleet Street headquarters of the 'News of the World'; which has been shamelessly plugged throughout the film.
Connoisseurs of old British movies will recognise John Turnbull as the detective, Anthony Baird (the hospitalised racing driver in 'Dead of Night') as the wanted man, and John Le Mesurier in an eyeshade in a couple of scenes as one of the night staff at 'The News of the World'.
Did you know
- TriviaFirst film featuring John Le Mesurier (uncredited).
- GoofsThere is a complete mismatch of the stock footage of the two trains which are used to indicate the murderers means of transport following the murder - the engines are two totally different class locomotives.
- Crazy creditsOpening credits prologue: This story is true . . . . .
By that we do not mean these events actually happened. We mean that it is a story of real newspaper life.
While you sleep in your beds the news of the world is collected, sifted, investigated and presented by mechanical means at your breakfast table.
This is primarily a film to show how that comes about. The story selected is an old one. Murder . . . . .
But every murder story is front page news for a newspaper. And if this film helps you to know how that news appears on the breakfast table, it will have achieved its object . . . . . . .
- ConnectionsReferences Showtime (1946)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Filming locations
- Viking Film Studios, 1-5 St Mary Abbots Place, Kensington, London, Greater London, England, UK(made at Viking Studios Kensington)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 3 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1