Jean Talbot poses as a crook to infiltrate the gang of thieves who killed her jeweler father, Michael.Jean Talbot poses as a crook to infiltrate the gang of thieves who killed her jeweler father, Michael.Jean Talbot poses as a crook to infiltrate the gang of thieves who killed her jeweler father, Michael.
Anthony Pelly
- Bentock
- (as Tony Pelly)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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The interesting thing about this film is the psychology. Dr. Michael Conway is a well situated doctor who attends to his duties and takes care of his mother, but he has a brother who is of the opposite sort. After a robbery that goes wrong he is sorely beaten up and almost killed in a car accident but gets away and to his brother to bandage him up. Later he asks his brother to tell the police that they played chess together all evening, and the brother, being a conscientious doctor sticking to the obligation of silence and all that, grants his brother that alibi, without suspecting that in the failed robbery his brother accidentally killed the robbed jeweller, who was no one less than Ian Fleming. But the jeweller has a daughter, (Elizabeth Sellars), who happened to be there at the time, and accidentally she runs into the murderer of her father and will never forget his face. The major part of the messy intrigue is about her very roundabout efforts to build up evidence against him - she even deigns to let him woo her just to get closer to him to get him nailed.
There are many crooks involved in this, and there are many hard blows and shootings, chases by night and rival gangs trying to gun down each other, piling up the mess, while at least Doctor Michael manages to keep out of trouble, realising far too late that he unintentionally contributed to the mess by protecting his brother. Alas, the main victim becomes their mother.
It's thick thriller, well written and well played, and the direction (by John Gilling who also wrote it) is qualified enough. Elizabeth Sellars, fresh from "The Broken Horseshoe", was good at suave ambiguous roles with covert intentions, and here even her father's murderer is deceived by her, while it is impossible to grant Kieron Moore any sympathy.
I watched and loved this crime film from UK because of the Kieron Moore's presence and performance. And an early John Gilling's movie is always worth the risk of wasting eighthy five minutes. The typical noir crime film from the fifties UK, which John Gilling was then the specialist, before offfering us later adventure and horror films...Here, the story proposes nothing really exceptional but the result is gritty, rough, with a good ending, which is very important. Not a masterpiece but still rare and worth watching. Kieron Moore was one of my favorite British actor from the fifties seventies era.
John Gilling wrote and directed this film noir in 1953, 10 years before the excellent "Panic". This story is more conventional, a young woman recognizes her father's killer and she seduces him until she has the opportunity to make him fall. The casting is ok but not fantastic. But there are some good action scenes, from the car chase in the beginning (but we're not yet in 1967-68 when Peter Yates directed "Robbery" and "Bullitt") to tough fights (nearly like in Phil Karlson's films noirs). Worth a look.
The 'other' Ian Fleming plays the lovely Elisabeth Sellars' father and Edward Underdown and Keiron Moore are rather unlikely siblings in this talky but well-acted and languidly ruthless little crime drama with the usual atmospheric photography by co-producer Monty Berman and some surprisingly violent action.
Jean (Elizabeh Sellars) witnesses the murder of her father, Talbot (Ian Fleming) by Nicholas (Kieran Moore) during a jewelry robbery. The man behind it all is Farnborough (Martin Benson) but Nicholas has kept back some jewels for himself to bargain with Farnborough so that they can become equal partners. Farnborough rejects his deal and so begins a rival gang-war. Meanwhile the police are after Talbot's killer and Nicholas gets his brother, Michael (Edward Underdown), to provide an alibi for him. Jean rents a room in the same house that Michael has a doctor's practice so that she can befriend Nicholas with the purpose of revealing him as the killer. Both brothers fall in love with her and this brings extra dramatic tension to the story.
The film follows how Jean gains Nicholas's confidence (with the police in the background), the war-fare between Fanborough and Nicholas's gangs, and the drama between Nicholas and his brother who don't see eye-to-eye. On a personal note, I didn't care much for the scenes with the mother (Ethel O'Shea) and I found it hard to believe that Nicholas and Michael were brothers because of their different accents! However, its a well-acted, tense story that is played out at a good speed.
The film follows how Jean gains Nicholas's confidence (with the police in the background), the war-fare between Fanborough and Nicholas's gangs, and the drama between Nicholas and his brother who don't see eye-to-eye. On a personal note, I didn't care much for the scenes with the mother (Ethel O'Shea) and I found it hard to believe that Nicholas and Michael were brothers because of their different accents! However, its a well-acted, tense story that is played out at a good speed.
Did you know
- TriviaAt about 7 minutes in, the car overturns and catches fire. This is the same footage as used in Cross-Up (1954). Note that the car that burns is not the Jaguar they were driving. The burning car doesn't have the sleek curves of a Jag and the windows are nothing like the ones on the car just seen. They obviously weren't going to set fire to a nice Jaguar. In fact, the whole car chase sequence that leads up to the crash is the same in both films with police car FNB 578 chasing Jaguar LXP 202. Notice the buildings, particularly as they take corners.
- GoofsNear the end, Sellars gets into taxi KGN 624 and, seconds later, gets out of taxi KGN 686.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Gonjen do smrti
- Filming locations
- Alliance Studios, Twickenham, Middlesex, England, UK(studio: made at Alliance Film Studios London)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 19m(79 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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