A man hires a killer to avenge an innocent girl's death.A man hires a killer to avenge an innocent girl's death.A man hires a killer to avenge an innocent girl's death.
G.H. Mulcaster
- Bennett
- (as George Mulcaster)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Presumably this was made to go on the bottom half of a United Artists double bill.
Most of the film consists of talk. There is virtually no action. The title and much of the plot makes little sense. Dont go out of your way to watch this.
Most of the film consists of talk. There is virtually no action. The title and much of the plot makes little sense. Dont go out of your way to watch this.
The film opens with a girl either jumping in front of a train, or was she pushed?? Getting to the bottom of the cause seems to be the plot of the story, from the British office of United Artists. And now we're in flashback! Dennis O'Keefe, Ann Sears, and Eileen Elton star in this story, as we follow their sad tale. SO much talking! did this start out as a play? Plays usually have lots of talking. Story kind of drags along. not exciting or suspense-full. The best scene in this shindig is the last 10 minutes. If you can sit through the rest of it. Story by Irve Tunick. He had worked together with director Burt Balaban many times. Balaban had many ties to hollywood! We all know his cousin, actor Bob Balaban, from Close Encounters, Best in Show and Mighty Wind. And Burt's own father had been president of Paramount, and owned movie theaters. Burt Balaban died quite young at age 43, but i haven't been able to find out the cause... doesn't seem to be listed anywhere. most odd.
"Lady of Vengeance" from 1957 could have been better, yes, but it is what it is -- one of those "B" British films that can be kind of fun.
This one stars Dennis O'Keefe, who made several of these types of films.
Dennis O'Keefe plays a newspaper mogul, William Marshall, whose ward (Eileen Elton) committed suicide. He receives a letter from her after her death that tells the story of what led her to such a drastic act.
Marshall approaches a stamp collector named Karnak (Anton Diffring) in order to get his help in committing a murder, on one condition: the victim must suffer a slow, painful death.
In other hands, this might have been terrific; here it comes off as average, due to a distracting subplot and the fact that the script could have been tighter.
Most notable about this film is the performance of Anton Diffring, a striking actor both in looks and persona, who worked in character roles in films in Britain, Germany, and in international films such as Fahrenheit 451. He died in 1989, possibly from AIDS. He gives a marvelous performance here and it's easily the best thing about the film.
This one stars Dennis O'Keefe, who made several of these types of films.
Dennis O'Keefe plays a newspaper mogul, William Marshall, whose ward (Eileen Elton) committed suicide. He receives a letter from her after her death that tells the story of what led her to such a drastic act.
Marshall approaches a stamp collector named Karnak (Anton Diffring) in order to get his help in committing a murder, on one condition: the victim must suffer a slow, painful death.
In other hands, this might have been terrific; here it comes off as average, due to a distracting subplot and the fact that the script could have been tighter.
Most notable about this film is the performance of Anton Diffring, a striking actor both in looks and persona, who worked in character roles in films in Britain, Germany, and in international films such as Fahrenheit 451. He died in 1989, possibly from AIDS. He gives a marvelous performance here and it's easily the best thing about the film.
A very obscure US British production for sure, not widely known, but rather good to watch. I will prefer Anton Diffring here than a very predictable Dennis O'Keefe in a Alfred Hitchcock style like plot. Forgettable film, obviously but acceptable and fun to watch. Good period atmosphere, noir atmosphere but unfortunately a bit bland and flat. Burt Balaban gives here his first picture and the following ones will be far better: MURDER INC and MAD DOG COLL, two gangsters stories. So, this one is worth seeing if you can reach it and have nothing else to do, and also if you are a die hard movie collector or gem seeker. Excellent ending, far above average.
1956's "Lady of Vengeance" was an obscure British 'B' rarely seen in its day, issued by United Artists in the US in August 1957, first popping up on Turner Classic Movies in November 2008. Dennis O'Keefe is the imported Hollywood star, 12 years before his death, as powerful newspaper mogul William T. Marshall, whose pretty young ward (Eileen Elton) inexplicably commits suicide by jumping in front of a passing train. Marshall soon receives a message from the dead girl, explaining the circumstances surrounding her decision, which leads him to bribe a shady stamp collector named Emile Karnak (Anton Diffring) into helping him 'commit a murder,' on the condition that the intended victim suffers a slow and painful demise. Bogged down by a romantic sideline involving Marshall's lovely secretary (Ann Sears), plus occasional flashbacks featuring his ward, the film provides an excellent example of villainous Anton Diffring's scene stealing artistry. "Lady of Vengeance" appeared twice on Pittsburgh's Chiller Theater - May 9 1964 (paired with 1958's "Terror in the Haunted House") and Aug 28 1965 (paired with 1953's "The Neanderthal Man").
Did you know
- TriviaThe working title for this film was "Mistress to Murder"
- Crazy creditsand introducing
ANN SEARS
- How long is Lady of Vengeance?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- İntikam kadını
- Filming locations
- Borehamwood, Hertfordshire, England, UK(British National Studios)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 13m(73 min)
- Color
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content