The pretty owner of a 'greasy spoon' cafe helps a handsome customer involved in robbery and murder.The pretty owner of a 'greasy spoon' cafe helps a handsome customer involved in robbery and murder.The pretty owner of a 'greasy spoon' cafe helps a handsome customer involved in robbery and murder.
Jim Brady
- Cafe Patron
- (uncredited)
Harry H. Corbett
- Cafe Patron Wearing Glasses
- (uncredited)
John Fabian
- Land Rover Driver
- (uncredited)
Shirley Jaffe
- Undetermined role
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
5.5156
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Featured reviews
Passes Like a Kidney Stone
Lee Patterson rents a room in the cafe run by Diane Cilento and her sister, Olive Gregg. He's a deserter from the US Army and on the run, hooking into some underworld operators for the cash to get back to America without papers. Miss Cilento and he fall in love, and decide to run away together.
Cinematographer Walter Lassally shoots Miss Cilento to her advantage, and Patterson looks good in a t-shirt, but this movie doesn't offer any sympathy to Patterson, especially after it stops dead for ten minutes for a flashback to fill in his story. Perhaps it's my middle-class attitude and advanced years, but I feel no sympathy for the leads; if Patterson wants out, he should have slugged an officer and taken the two years at Fort Leavenworth, and if she wants out of her cafe, it turns out that London is an hour's drive away. I feel more sympathy for Duncan Lamont, who has had an understanding with Miss Cilento for some years, but she has insisted on some financial stability, while she's ready to run off and live an underground life with Patterson. Erratic pacing doesn't help.
Cinematographer Walter Lassally shoots Miss Cilento to her advantage, and Patterson looks good in a t-shirt, but this movie doesn't offer any sympathy to Patterson, especially after it stops dead for ten minutes for a flashback to fill in his story. Perhaps it's my middle-class attitude and advanced years, but I feel no sympathy for the leads; if Patterson wants out, he should have slugged an officer and taken the two years at Fort Leavenworth, and if she wants out of her cafe, it turns out that London is an hour's drive away. I feel more sympathy for Duncan Lamont, who has had an understanding with Miss Cilento for some years, but she has insisted on some financial stability, while she's ready to run off and live an underground life with Patterson. Erratic pacing doesn't help.
Low-key
The best aspect of "The Passing Stranger" is the array of recognisable minor actors of the 1950s in the cast and the backdrop in some scenes of London docklands.
Lee Paterson was underwhelming in the lead and my first reaction to Diane Cilento was that she was an unlikely person to run a "greasy-spoon" cafe for lorry-drivers, especially when wearing a tight-fitting top in the early scenes. But later close-ups showed a woman without the glamour of her later roles.
Lee Paterson was underwhelming in the lead and my first reaction to Diane Cilento was that she was an unlikely person to run a "greasy-spoon" cafe for lorry-drivers, especially when wearing a tight-fitting top in the early scenes. But later close-ups showed a woman without the glamour of her later roles.
Mundane
There is nothing original or exciting about this film. In fact, the only reason to watch is its very attractive leads, Lee Patterson and Fiance Ciento. There are some bleak landscape shots of early 1950s Britain.
There is very little plot, very little tension, a minimum of romance and virtually no suspense. You've seen it all before.
As said earlier, Patterson and Cilento were quite attractive. It is a shame they didn't have better chemistry and their romance built up.
This is basically a time capsule. A cheaply made b film to take Brit's minds off the stress of rebuilding and paying for the war.
There is very little plot, very little tension, a minimum of romance and virtually no suspense. You've seen it all before.
As said earlier, Patterson and Cilento were quite attractive. It is a shame they didn't have better chemistry and their romance built up.
This is basically a time capsule. A cheaply made b film to take Brit's minds off the stress of rebuilding and paying for the war.
Old Favourite Actors
Lee Patterson as Turner and Lyndon Brook as Johnny Sanderson in "Reach for the Sky" (1956), Liam Redmond as an Irish immigrant in "A Night to Remember (1958), Paul Witsun Jones in "The Gordon Honour" (1954) BBC tv childrens hour serial, Diane Cilento in "The Little Hut" (1953) with Kenneth More; are just some of the actors I recognised from my childhood.Recently there is a new tv channel 81 in the London area called "Talking Pictures" which I increasingly find myself watching as they show the old films I relish and which remind me of my youth ( I am now 72).
No spoilers I promise but you must always remember there was a film code which producers had to abide by in films like "Passing Strangers (1954), which meant characters could not profit from their mis-deeds.Lee Paterson as Chick a US deserter in the UK, elicits our sympathy when he falls in love with the attractive blonde Diane Cilento as Jill (Sean Connery's ex-missus).Another fascinating aspect of these old films is seeing cars on the street I remember in the 1950s.I believe I am one of the first users to comment on this film but don't worry "Talking Pictures" are bound to repeat it in the not too distant future.
No spoilers I promise but you must always remember there was a film code which producers had to abide by in films like "Passing Strangers (1954), which meant characters could not profit from their mis-deeds.Lee Paterson as Chick a US deserter in the UK, elicits our sympathy when he falls in love with the attractive blonde Diane Cilento as Jill (Sean Connery's ex-missus).Another fascinating aspect of these old films is seeing cars on the street I remember in the 1950s.I believe I am one of the first users to comment on this film but don't worry "Talking Pictures" are bound to repeat it in the not too distant future.
Ambitious But Plodding
An attempt to break into features by several interesting talents offering a moody but drab & tinny slice of low life with the novelty of being set in Oxfordshire, a rather monotonous guitar score and an interesting cast of youngsters (including fleeting appearances by Harry Corbett before he added the 'H.' and Warren Mitchell).
Did you know
- TriviaVery early appearance of a young Warren Mitchell (with hair) in a small, uncredited speaking part, as a prospective customer of the cafe. Probably only 1st or 2nd film (according to most available information including IMDb). He was already a stage actor having graduated from RADA in 1949.
- How long is The Passing Stranger?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 24m(84 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content
