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The Stranger in Between

Original title: Hunted
  • 1952
  • Approved
  • 1h 24m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
1.5K
YOUR RATING
The Stranger in Between (1952)
Film NoirCrimeDrama

A violent fugitive and a mistreated small boy team up to flee from authority.A violent fugitive and a mistreated small boy team up to flee from authority.A violent fugitive and a mistreated small boy team up to flee from authority.

  • Director
    • Charles Crichton
  • Writers
    • Michael McCarthy
    • Jack Whittingham
  • Stars
    • Dirk Bogarde
    • Jon Whiteley
    • Elizabeth Sellars
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    1.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Charles Crichton
    • Writers
      • Michael McCarthy
      • Jack Whittingham
    • Stars
      • Dirk Bogarde
      • Jon Whiteley
      • Elizabeth Sellars
    • 22User reviews
    • 10Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Photos65

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    Top cast30

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    Dirk Bogarde
    Dirk Bogarde
    • Chris Lloyd
    Jon Whiteley
    Jon Whiteley
    • Robbie
    Elizabeth Sellars
    Elizabeth Sellars
    • Magda Lloyd
    Kay Walsh
    Kay Walsh
    • Mrs. Sykes
    Frederick Piper
    • Mr. Sykes
    Julian Somers
    • Jack Lloyd
    Jane Aird
    • Mrs. Campbell
    Jack Stewart
    • Mr. Campbell
    Geoffrey Keen
    Geoffrey Keen
    • Detective Inspector Deakin
    Douglas Blackwell
    • Detective Sergeant Grayson
    Leonard White
    • Police Station Sergeant
    Gerald Andersen
    • Assistant Commissioner
    Denis Webb
    • Chief Superintendent
    Gerald Case
    • Deputy Assistant Commissioner
    John Bushelle
    • Chief Inspector
    Ewen Solon
    Ewen Solon
    • Radio Operator
    Katharine Blake
    • Waitress
    Molly Urquhart
    • Barmaid
    • Director
      • Charles Crichton
    • Writers
      • Michael McCarthy
      • Jack Whittingham
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews22

    7.31.5K
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    Featured reviews

    8arthur_tafero

    Tight Thriller UK-Style - Hunted

    There is a very perceptible difference between Hollywood productions and British filmmaking. Hollywood would have over-dramatized this film. "Big" stars would have been included. The production values would have been pristine, first-rate and in color. And the end result would have been considerably less than that which was produced by British filmmaking. Dick Bogarde was just as good as any 50s Hollywood male star. The child star, Jon Whitely, was exceptional, and some spoiled LA brat could not have done half as well. A film about a murderer trying to escape can be gripping. And a film about a mistreated boy who runs away from home can be very engaging as well. But if you combine those two elements, you have a classic, and this is it.
    6Neil-117

    Intense, bleak but ultimately uplifting early road movie.

    Britain just after the second world war must have been a grim place indeed. Still looking like a bomb site, with poor living standards, inadequate social services, stifling conformity and tough policing. Amid this bleak social landscape, Bogarde is a hopeless, alienated character fleeing from the police after a crime of momentary passion. He is joined by a scared and emotionally scarred small boy also on the run from a harsh reality. Their journey together is gruelling yet at the same time strangely aimless, as they focus on escaping the past with little idea of their future.

    Like all good road movies, the journey changes the characters, as they are affected, enriched and ultimately redeemed by their own striving and by their personal interaction. Any more detail would spoil this story but you can be guaranteed of a fine reward at the end if you can stick with the grinding progress of this particular odyssey.

    Filmed in suitably bleak black and white, there's a slightly too earnest quality about the way this movie strives to put everything in the worst possible perspective – but that's when looked at from the comfortable perspective of half a century later when life is a lot softer for many of us. Go the distance with this one and you'll be a better person for it.
    9planktonrules

    At first this appears to be yet another Dirk Bogarde thug film....but it's more than that.

    In the 1950s, Dirk Bogarde played three main sorts of roles in films--sailors or soldiers, the nice Dr. Sparrow in the Doctor movies as well as complete sociopaths. Of these roles, the sociopaths are by far the most interesting to watch. During this time, he often played murderers and crooks on the run. So, when I first started watching "The Stranger in Between", it came as no surprise as he's once again playing a murderer on the run! However, as the film progresses you realize that this seemingly simple film has a lot more depth to it--depth that make it a standout picture.

    When the movie begins, a cute little boy is hiding after he'd been playing with matches. He stumbles into the hiding place of Chris (Bogarde)--a guy who is wanted for murder! Chris doesn't want to let the boy go--he could tell people where he's hiding. So he convinces the boy that the police are looking for BOTH of them and they set off together on a cross-country run to avoid capture.

    About midway through this movie, you start to notice some things that make it interesting. Chris isn't just a mindless killer--his motivations and what he did exactly aren't quite so black and white. The boy also is not just some scared kid--he's been terribly abused and in some ways he's better off on the run with a killer than staying in his former life! The film also has a few unexpectedly nice moments between the two. Chalk this up to excellent acting, writing and direction. Where is this all going? Well, see the film to find out for yourself.
    8dromasca

    a gem in black and white

    The name of the English director Charles Crichton is almost automatically associated by many with 'A Fish Called Wanda', the sparkling comedy from 1988. However, that was practically the last fiction film made by the director who was then 78 years old and was at the end of a career in who had directed more than 50 films in various genres from comedies to thrillers and had also put his name on some memorable creations of British television, including episodes of the cult series 'The Avengers' in the 60s. 36 years before this latest success, Crichton had directed a gem of a black-and-white film called 'Hunted' starring Dirk Bogarde, one of his favorite actors, alongside a six-and-a-half-year-old blond boy who filled the screen, like any child actor of great talent. In one hour and 20 minutes, Crichton has created a believable and humane story and captured, better than any documentary of the era, the image of an England struggling to recover from the destruction and human trauma of war.

    Alfred Hitchcock emerged in the English film school, but had crossed the ocean over a decade before 1952. I think that he appreciated and would have signed the first few minutes of 'Hunted' without hesitation. It's an exceptional introduction. A boy of about six runs through the streets of London with a teddy bear in his hand. He carelessly crosses the street and is almost run over by a carriage pulled by two stallions. He continues to run and takes refuge in a building in ruins. There he comes across a man smoking a cigarette next to a corpse. We understand that he had just killed another man. The child freezes and drops the toy from his hands. The man takes his hand and the two leave together - the killer and the only witness to the crime.

    Chris, the murderous man, had as motive for his crime the infidelity of his wife, who had taken advantage of the long absences due to his profession as a sailor to cheat on him. Robbie, the little boy, had good reasons to run away from home where he was being abused by his adoptive parents. The dependence between the two turns into a relationship of friendship and mutual support. They are fugitives and cross England from south to north, reaching the sea that may open the gate of salvation for them. All is shot with documentary simplicity and authenticity by Eric Cross, one of the best-known and most prolific cinematographers of English pre- and post-WWII films. Italian neorealism is not far away. Jon Whiteley is amazing as the little boy. Child actors usually charm and conquer through naturalness and sincerity, in his case an extraordinary expressiveness is added. Chris and Robbie's relationship never descends into melodrama. 'Hunted' is a simple and moving film, a beautiful combination of film noir and road movie, a gem in black and white.
    10dbdumonteil

    The granddaddy of "a perfect world"...

    ....and "Gloria" (1980) and "Leon" as well...Charles Crichton,whose career spans the second half of the century ("a fish named Wanda"!),is definitely a director to upgrade.

    "Hunted" is a small gem ,a suspenseful sensitive story which casts Bogarde as an unlucky murderer on the lam and young John Whiteley as a moving kid.A road movie,from the bleak city to the wild moors of Scotland ,where a special chemistry between the man and the boy literally grows on the audience .

    Spoilers.Spoilers. Like all the great storytellers ,Crichton introduces first Bogarde as the "villain " who abducts a cute brat.But further acquaintance shows this:actually both of them are victims of a society that increases the prestige of money ,of Bogarde's boss who sleeps with his wife ,a society that does not care a little bit about its orphans whom it leaves to hateful "parents" .The boy really acts as if he's got nothing to lose.

    Admirable sequence :In a bedroom they share for one night,Bogarde begins a bedtime story for his protégé:it's a fairy tale ,a story of a giant.But little by little ,the story becomes HIS own story :what a smart way of letting us know about the hero's past!During this sequence ,which takes place halfway through the film,we see the boy SMILE for the first time.His face is so beaming we are on the verge of tears .He will laugh later ,in his pal's mean brother's house ,during the meal.When Bogarde sails away with his "hostage" ,he makes the story he told come true . End of spoilers .end of spoilers

    Bogarde's rendering is a real tour de force and many consider this part

    his first important one:tense,distraught,anguished,he runs the whole gamut of emotions.Matching him every step of the way is Whiteley's performance :in the three examples I mention at the beginning of my comment ,which I admire (with the exception of Besson's) ,the young actors cannot hold a candle to him.Instant karma:he won a special AA the following year,and was given the main part in Lang's "Moonfleet" in 1954.He was to meet again Bogarde in "Spanish gardener".

    Crichton had often been labeled "for the whole family".But they totally missed the point:"hunted" is not a rosy work,its open ending does not settle the things ,but increases our fear of what will become of our two so endearing heroes.His directing is now nervous -the first sequences when the heroes do not stop running -,now intimate -all the scenes where the two characters hang on to each other,now poetic -the seagulls which accompany the triumphant voyage .A wonderful use of nature (not unlike Charles Laughton's "the night of the hunter") and its wildlife where the runaways take refuge.

    Wonderful movie.

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    Related interests

    Lauren Bacall and Humphrey Bogart in The Big Sleep (1946)
    Film Noir
    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in The Sopranos (1999)
    Crime
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    Drama

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Sir Dirk Bogarde (Chris Lloyd) credited this movie with moving him into genuine stardom, and also often claimed that it was one of the very few movies he was in during the 1950s, of which he was proud.
    • Quotes

      Chris Lloyd: Cup of coffee and a packet of Woodbines please.

      [Checks his pockets for change]

      Chris Lloyd: You can forget the Woodbines.

    • Connections
      Featured in Film Profile: Dirk Bogarde (1961)
    • Soundtracks
      Early One Morning
      (uncredited)

      English folk song

      Whistled by Dirk Bogarde

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    FAQ17

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 17, 1952 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Odveden
    • Filming locations
      • Portpatrick, Stranraer, Dumfries & Galloway, Scotland, UK
    • Production companies
      • J. Arthur Rank Organisation
      • Independent Artists
      • British Film-Makers
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 24m(84 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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