A woman has been sentenced to death by hanging. Her cousin believes she is innocent and he works against time to prove it before she is executed.A woman has been sentenced to death by hanging. Her cousin believes she is innocent and he works against time to prove it before she is executed.A woman has been sentenced to death by hanging. Her cousin believes she is innocent and he works against time to prove it before she is executed.
Donald Bisset
- Supt. Shelford
- (as Donald Bissett)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
A really neat little thriller, the story plays fair and the killer comes as a real surprise. The cast work well together and Dennis Price is a reliable lead as the solver of the crime. Well worth 90 minutes of your time.
This is a neat thriller. The acting is good, and what's more important is that it is 1953 and Capital Punishment is the focus of the film. It was good to show back then that there were innocent men and women being executed in this country. On the surface it does not attack the system, but in one essential way it does. If an innocent person is executed, then it puts to shame the whole concept of murder by state murder. Also 1953 was one of the most appalling years in UK judicial history. Homosexual men were rounded up as never before and imprisoned, and state execution was considered ' normal ' by most so-called decent people. It was a brave act to make this film and to make a basically indifferent public aware that the wrong person could be caught and hanged. The Craig/Bentley case posed many questions, but it took Ruth Ellis to realise that Capital Punishment was a crime in itself. In the more enlightened Sixties both Homosexuality and Capital punishment showed many in the public that new laws were needed and death by execution was abolished and homosexuality was partly decriminalised.
This film was a step forward, and the anguish on the condemned woman's face speaks volumes. For this alone and her acting it is worth seeing, and to reflect on how much was wrong back in the Fifties. Wolf Rilla keeps the pace going, and all within one hour and sixteen minutes. Not great, but necessary.
Dennis Price plays the urbane and English gentleman on leave from colonial Uganda where he is a district commissioner. However, when he goes to visit his cousin in a quaint English village, he finds to his horror that she is in prison, waiting to be hanged for poisoning her husband. The storyline is very much in the same mould of an Agatha Christie crime novel, with Price playing the sleuth, investigating all the potential suspects in the village. I enjoyed this low budget film as the acting is first rate and the dialogue is convincing, albeit somewhat dated for today's audiences. The ending of the film is rather theatrical and staged, as Price gathers all the suspects in one room stating that one of them is the murderer. However, despite this cliched scene, it's a film that is well worth watching just to see the incomparable Dennis Price in a role where he doesn't play the villain.
Dennis Price once again plays detective in this entertaining murder mystery.He plays a relation of a murdered man who finds that the man's wife has been convicted of murder and is facing execution.He joins forces with the murdered man's stepdaughter to track down the real murderer.The problem is that the local poacher who saw the murderer creep away from the house is himself murdered.Then Charles Lloyd Pack who looks as if he has an important clue has a stoke and dies in hospital.So with time ticking away all the usual suspects are assembled together,and believe it or not they include Esme Cannon..I have to say that the identity of the murderer is cleverly disguised,I did not guess write and was put off the scent by some very effective red herrings.So although essential a supporting feature the cast writing and direction make this into a very effective low budget thriller.
Pamela Alan is to hang for murdering her husband. Cousin Dennis Price comes in from Uganda and proposes to find the real murderer with the help of Rona Anderson, Miss Alan's stepdaughter.
Wolf Rilla's first feature feature after toiling for a decade in the BBC's television division is a rather straightforward mystery in which Price proposes to prove that the British justice system has gotten it all wrong with the skeptical help of police sergeant George Merritt. This includes all the traditional appurtenances of such stories, including the scene where he gathers all the suspects together. He has little trouble accumulating two additional corpses and several people with some excellent motives and opportunities. This makes one wonder what the police and the defense had been doing.
Rilla handwaves this away, and deals with the endless talking and the help of Walter J. Harvey's gracefully moving camera. The result is a good, if unexceptional murder movie although I suspected the actual murderer about halfway through. There were enough decent red herrings to keep me in doubt until the revelation.
Wolf Rilla's first feature feature after toiling for a decade in the BBC's television division is a rather straightforward mystery in which Price proposes to prove that the British justice system has gotten it all wrong with the skeptical help of police sergeant George Merritt. This includes all the traditional appurtenances of such stories, including the scene where he gathers all the suspects together. He has little trouble accumulating two additional corpses and several people with some excellent motives and opportunities. This makes one wonder what the police and the defense had been doing.
Rilla handwaves this away, and deals with the endless talking and the help of Walter J. Harvey's gracefully moving camera. The result is a good, if unexceptional murder movie although I suspected the actual murderer about halfway through. There were enough decent red herrings to keep me in doubt until the revelation.
Did you know
- Quotes
Vanessa Lane: Tell us about Uganda.
Simon Gale: It's very big and it's very hot.
- Crazy creditsOpening credits prologue: "Better a hundred guilty escape than one innocent be hanged."
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Ştreang pentru o doamnă
- Filming locations
- Merton Park Studios, London, England, UK(studio: made at Merton Park Studios also)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 16m(76 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content