Tuesday, December 22, 2020

Dilemma (1962)

A highly enjoyable but curious little drama. Music teacher Harry (Peter Halliday) arrives home not long after a scream was heard in his home and his wife Jean (Ingrid Hafner) was seen running out by nosy neighbour Mrs Jones (Edna Burke). Harry has something more important to worry about, there is a dying man in the bathroom! Harry quickly decides he has to get rid of the man, now dead, whom he assumes his wife killed (what a good hubby!) He lifts up the floorboards and buries the corpse in concrete, though amusingly he keeps getting interrupted by the likes of nuns, piano tuners and Mrs Jones.


Jean though is busy too, first of all getting a hand injury stitched up, then getting a flight ticket and then trying to empty her safety deposit box. However, she can't find her key. The police in the form of Inspector Murray (Patrick Jordan) are looking for a known criminal who has been seen in the area. When Harry sees the mugshot he has a shock. Its the bloke now under the floorboards!

A tense little drama though with a degree of farce where Harry is regularly interrupted. The twist in the end when Jean's house of cards collapse is well worth waiting for. The soundtrack is strangely light though considering the content.

Monday, December 21, 2020

The Eagle (1925)

A glorious Rudolph Valentino feature from the golden age of silent film with the usual impressively vast sets and large numbers of extras. Valentino plays Dubrovsky, a lieutenant in the imperial Russian army. After he spurns the advances of the Czarina (Louise Dresser) he is forced to go on the run and become a fugitive.


Dubrovsky returns home and find's his family lands have been seized by the evil Kyrilla (James A Marcus). Dubrovsky becomes a masked bandit to fight Kyrilla and instead falls in love with the evil one's daughter Mascha (Vilma Banky)...

And it is all fast paced swashbuckling fun. Valentino is very much in action mode in this film compared to some of his other films where he is there largely for women to swoon over. A great Valentino film, unfortunately he only had one more in him.

Friday, December 18, 2020

The Teckman Mystery (1954)

A slow-burning but interesting espionage mystery. Philip Chance (John Justin) is tasked to write the biography of a test pilot, Martin Techman. Techman died recently in a plane crash, by coincidence Philip meets the pilot's sister Helen Teckman (Margaret Leighton) on his flight to London. Soon after he begins his task, strange things start to occur. He is offered a lucrative job in Berlin by the somewhat mysterious Mr Rice (Meier Tzeiniker), then Martin's old friend Garvin (George Coulouris) turns up dead in Philip's apartment...

The mystery deepens as Philip meets Martin's wife Ruth (Jane Wenham). The police (Roland Culver) are also very interested in Philip and Techman. Things come to a head when Philip discovers that Martin is alive after all! 

A well-layered mystery with a number of surprises and twists. The film is modest but well formed, Philip's character has the light chippy nature of a Golden Age amateur detective. Indeed this often feels like one of those interwar dramas.

Thursday, December 17, 2020

The Silent Partner (1978)

A gripping crime drama. Miles (Elliot Gould) is the unfortunate bank teller at the bank Santa Claus decides to rob. The thief is really Reikle (Christopher Plummer) and he gets away with some cash but Miles sees the opportunity to steal some money himself and place the blame on Reikle. 

Reikle, naturally, is rather taken aback when he reads news that the bank heist was far higher than he actually got. He discovers Miles' address and begins to put pressure on him to hand over the cash. Miles proves to be just a rascal as Reikle though and he fits him up for another crime. That isn't the end of things though as Miles and Reikle begin a game of cat and mouse...

A highly enjoyable crime drama. The coolness of Miles is the highlight of the film as he conceives highly complicated plots to hide the theft of the money, the loss of a safety deposit box and even covering up a murder. His luck in love doesn't go as smoothly especially with Julie (Susanna York) but he gets there in the end.

Wednesday, December 16, 2020

Out of the Fog (1962)

A neat little crime drama though one which plods along at a leisurely pace. Young blonde girls are being killed on the heath whenever there is a full moon. Detective Superintendent Chadwick (John Arnatt) suspects it could be ex-con George (David Sumner) who has just come out of gaol and is at lodgings nearby, especially as the recent victim was his ex-girlfriend...


WS June Lock (Susan Travers) is sent undercover to befriend George and to eventually act as bait. Will she help prove his innocence or end up the next victim?

A nicely stylish (despite the low budget) early 1960s British film. The film is chiefly about exploring George's dark character, which is just as well because the actual criminal investigation is incredibly pedestrian. George spends most of the film in a bad mood but the more we learn about his life the more we understand just why he has such a poor opinion of his fellow man.

Tuesday, December 15, 2020

Defence of the Realm (1985)

A highly intelligent political thriller. Reporter Nick Mullen (Gabriel Byrne) investigates an MP (Bill Paterson) who is suspected in being somehow involved with a KGB spy. Mullen's fellow reporter, and old soak, Bayliss (Denholm Elliot) thinks there is a far bigger story. 

After Bayliss' suspicious death, Mullen begins to follow up on what Bayliss was investigating, a mysterious death of a youth and possible involvement in nuclear weapons at a US air base.

Mullen and the MP's assistant Beckman (Greta Scacchi) get involved in a game of cat and mouse with the dark forces behind the state who want to ensure a cover-up, no matter who gets hurt...

The story is very well constructed with excellent performances from the cast. An intricate story of Cold War politics and intrigue. The period view of the workings of the 1980s news room (all typewriters and dicta-phones) is also fascinating.

Monday, December 14, 2020

The Secret Tunnel (1948)

An enjoyable children's adventure. When Roger (Tony Wager) discovers that his Dad's Rembrandt has been stolen from the supposedly secure vault at his mansion, he begins to investigate with John (Ivor Bowyer) the butler's son. They find a secret tunnel that leads from the vault and suspicion falls on the cook Mrs Matthews (Thelma Rea) and the antique seller Mr Harvey (Frank Henderson)...

Then a gang is let into the house by Mrs Matthews to empty out the rest of the vault. The two boys are captured but manage to escape and then help the police find the gang's hide out...

A straight forward adventure with plenty for viewers (of all ages) to enjoy. The story is fairly cliched but there is nothing wrong with good old fashioned fun.