Uneasy Terms (1948) Poster

(1948)

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7/10
Entertaining P.I. film.
gordonl5618 October 2006
Warning: Spoilers
An entertaining British take on the U.S. hard boiled private eye film. Michael Rennie plays a P.I. called in to get the goods on a crooked gambling club owner. The gambler, who does a spot of blackmail on the side has some info that Rennie's client would like returned. Of course the villain does not wish to play along and things get nasty. While most films from the UK take a somewhat more refined look at murder, this one pulls out all the stops. Cross and double cross, a full selection mickey finns, fists, guns and bodies keep this one zinging right along. The film is peppered throughout with American style dialogue and some nice jazz music. The screenplay is by Peter Cheyney who was the creator of the Lemmy Caution series of books and films. Nice try by cast and crew at what must of been a real change of pace.

Gord
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6/10
"Upon my soul sir, you really are a violent person!"
richardchatten24 October 2020
Pete Cheyney's private eye Slim Callaghan makes his first appearance in the urbane form of Michael Rennie as his path crosses that of youthful versions of Moira Lister, Faith Brook, Nigel Patrick, Paul Carpenter and Sydney Tafler in this genteel British attempt at the hard-boiled Hollywood gumshoe dramas of the forties.

This also proved the last gasp of Louis H. Jackson as head of production of British National Pictures, which went bankrupt the year this was released.
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5/10
Adequate
Leofwine_draca27 October 2020
Warning: Spoilers
UNEASY TERMS is a British attempt to emulate the American film noir cycle that was in full swing by the late '40s. It's not a bad film, ably directed by Vernon Sewell - surely one of the country's hardest-working directors during the era - and with a typical murder mystery plot with a country mansion setting. There are femme fatales galore and Michael Rennie doing his best Bogart impression, along with fun lesser turns from familiar faces like Sydney Tafler and Paul Carpenter. The film is short enough to never outstay its welcome, although if you're a fan of this genre you're better off sticking with the original stuff.
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Brits Take a Whack At Noir
GManfred25 June 2010
Pretty good British Noir attempt, and with an intricate plot which does not allow any fridge visits. I don't agree with the reviewer above who felt it had a rough edge to it - to the contrary, I thought it was a very polite, bloodless form of noir. There is one fight (judo-style) and a shooting, which is shown in a flashback.

Having said that, I found 'Uneasy Terms' engrossing and with a labyrinthine plot, and with just one star that I recognized in the person of Michael Rennie. Actually, Nigel Patrick plays a heavy but he is more well-known in the UK than in the States. The story unfolds as Private Eye Rennie is drawn into a plot reminiscent of 'Farewell, My Lovely' as not two but THREE sisters are trying to 'adjust' their dead father's will (he was not dead when one of them contacted Rennie, you find out quickly). There then follows a number of plots and sub-plots, all of which makes sense at the end of the picture.

Very entertaining movie which also wins a Hand-Painted Mustache Cup for Most Inappropriate Musical Score, written and directed by Hans May. Very annoying, but don't let it deter you.
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7/10
Stars slowly, but gets better
lucyrfisher6 August 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Once the cast stop coming down an "Aldwych farcical" oak staircase and saying "Who was thet young men?", things move faster. Joy Shelton rises above her frumpy outfits, and by the end the excellent Moira Lister is revealed as a snakish femme fatale.

The fight scene is bizarre - "judo" was ascribed almost magical powers at the time. Nigel Patrick is as villainous as ever. The plot is convoluted to say the least, but it gets clearer by about halfway through.

1948 was an odd year for fashion. Wartime trends became more so, with coat-hanger shoulders, full skirts, big hats and extra hair. Moira Lister looks much prettier when she sheds the falls and switches. Little did they know that the New Look was just around the corner.

It plays like an American script transplanted. Who knew there was a wicked night club (the "Mardean") so near ROEDEAN!!!!! The Latin-tinged music is nice though. I wish I could go back in time and dance a rumba there.

For US readers, Roedean is a sedate seaside town. As so often in b/w movies, the seaside and country are moved nearer London (or vice versa).
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4/10
Boring!
JohnHowardReid14 October 2017
Warning: Spoilers
A British National production. Distributed by Pathé. Made at National studios, Elstree. Never theatrically released in the U.S.A. U.K. release through Pathé: 5 July 1948. Australian release through British Empire Films: 2 March 1951 (sic). 8,195 feet. 91 minutes. Cut by the distributor to 7,258 feet (80 minutes) in Australia.

SYNOPSIS: Slim Callaghan comes to the aid of a blackmail victim — a young, attractive female of course!

COMMENT: The prolific Peter Cheyney's novels were ultra-popular in my youth. They were everywhere — even the railway bookstalls stocked them. Cheyney machined them out at the rate of two new titles a year, which joined the ever-growing back-list on retailers' shelves.

Now here, for the first time would you believe, was a Cheyney novel on the screen — and featuring Cheyney's most popular series character, Slim Callaghan, well played, one must admit, by Michael Rennie, who neatly fitted the tall, slim, handsome Callaghan image.

Alas, the film itself proved a big disappointment. Blame for the film's failure lies squarely with the director, Vernon Sewell and the producer, Louis Jackson. Both seem determined to keep as much action off the screen as possible. One fight scene with Nigel Patrick spinning over the top of a desk is not worth waiting through all the tedious dialogue and stolidly uninteresting plot that has gone before.

All the same, production values are often unusually lavish. But the film itself is a bore. Admittedly, I am looking at the 80 minutes version. It's quite possible that all the action has been removed by some fiendish censor!
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3/10
static talkie far from film noir
happytrigger-64-39051728 September 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Although Michael Rennie looks a smart private detective, "Uneasy terms" is talkie and static, all actors are woody : nothing dynamic until the end with Michael Rennie fighting judo and some surprises. Even the female characters don't look beautiful, they have no expressions on their face. I only recommend this movie for Michael Rennie completists.
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8/10
Michael Rennie's Mr Callaghan
wilvram25 October 2020
This film was criticized both on its release and more recent reviews as a misguided British attempt to imitate American 'Noir' movies of the time. In fact it is unusual in closely following the narrative of Peter Cheyney's best-selling novel of the same title and replicates the particular world found in his books, all hugely successful in their day. It was a world of private eyes with a strong American influence, solving cases of blackmail and murder among England's wealthier classes, a world often reflected in British crime movies of the time. A typical Cheyney often featured a manor house and two or three attractive, beautifully attired women, one of whom would be a villain, and at least one who would fall in love with the hero. Here there are frequent references to a Miss Vendayne, the heroine of a previous Callaghan adventure. Cheyney took a keen interest in the film and a photo of him on set with Michael Rennie and Moira Lister was reproduced on the back of his next book. To complete the connection there is a glimpse of the cover of Uneasy Terms at the start of the credits.

It is interesting to compare Rennie's version of Callaghan with that of Derrick De Marney who played the role on stage and screen in Meet Mr Callaghan. The latter brought out the rather cynical and charmless nature of a man who was not above beating up suspects and planting evidence, but Rennie resembles more the physical appearance of the character and gives him a more appealing nature altogether. Also here is Callaghan's adoring secretary Effie (Joy Shelton) whom has to make do with the constant attention of his Canadian sidekick Windermere 'Windy' Nichols, an early role for Paul Carpenter. Faith Brook and Moira Lister are ideal as the two sisters with several skeletons in the closet while Barry Jones is Det. Insp. Gringall, the Scotland Yard man who profits from turning a blind eye to Callaghan's activities

I think this the better of the two British Callaghan features - several more were later made in France - and having not been shown since the 1970's it was good to see its return on Talking Pictures yesterday. Anyone interested in British films of the Forties, or is interested in Cheyney should enjoy it.
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4/10
Pale Itation Of American Films
malcolmgsw1 December 2013
In the late forties the screen was flooded with private eye films ,particularly from America,They starred the likes of Humphrey Bogart,Robert Mitchum,Robert Montgomery and Dick Powell and were written by Raymond Chandler and his contemporaries.Here we have to make do with Michael Rennie and Paul Carpenter and their mid Atlantic accents.The plot revolves around a will.The Colonel has provided that if any of his daughters marries she will forfeit her share of the estate.Of course one has and she is being blackmailed.However ,as a lawyer,i would be bound to say that such a will would be unenforceable at law so the main point of the plot collapses in an instant.We have a poor imitation of the dialogue you would expect from an American film.There is a fight toward the end which is conducted using judo and looks rather strange.Even Nigel Patrick,such a reliable villain ,is subdued here.
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5/10
Uneasy Terms
Prismark101 February 2021
Warning: Spoilers
British movies take on the film noir.

Michael Rennie is private eye Slim Callaghan. He is summoned by Colonel Stenhurst to his country house but is dead before Slim can talk to him.

Colonel Stenhurst had three grown up stepdaughters. Slim finds out that no daughter would get anything from the estate if they were married under the terms of their mother's will.

However it turns out one daughter was indeed secretly married. She was being blackmailed about it. The other daughter knew of it but kept quiet about her sister's marriage.

There is a hard boiled plot that is rather Raymond Chandleresque. A nice sister and one not so nice. It is also a story of blackmail, double crosses, a shady past, stolen identity and hidden secrets.

Slim discovers that not only two sisters were married. They were somehow married to the same man. None of the marriages were valid though.

However I was rather perturbed that one of them could not recognise a false finger.

A good plot let down by staid direction and little action. This is a B feature, rather low budget and dimly powered.
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5/10
Uneasy Terms
CinemaSerf5 January 2023
"Slim Callaghan" (Michael Rennie) is a PI with an habit of solving crimes using such unconventional methods as to annoy the police almost as much as he does the criminals. When a young woman drugs his Scotch at a night club, just as a would-be client tries to call him; then that same gent shakes off his mortal coil very shortly afterwards, his interest is well and truly piqued. Despite the protestations of one of the deceased man's three daughters, he heads to their home to investigate. Moira Lister, Faith Brook and Patricia Goddard play the daughters trying to manipulate the old man's will and one (or more) might be in cahoots with the dastardly Nigel Patrick ("Lucien"). The story is just too busy - too many threads that are only superficially developed and Nigel Patrick doesn't really quite fit his billing either. At times the narrative made me think I was listening to a radio play with pictures as there is a great deal of dialogue, and very little action until quite near the end when some of the duplicitous undercurrents come to the surface. The story is sound enough, but the film is just too stodgily delivered to remain engaging.
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8/10
Top notch British noir.
mark.waltz23 June 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Reading the mixed reviews gives me the indication that this film is going to be a matter of taste which is perfectly fine in my agree to disagree view of other reviews, understanding well written reviews that don't align with mine and feeling relief that others noticed what I did. Before going to Hollywood, British actor Michael Rennie delivered a swell performance as a London detective involved in the murder investigation of the client who never came to be, having called Rennie up for a meeting, and never meeting him due to the fact that he was murdered. Joy Shelton's Eve Arden like secretary gets some sensational lines.

The victim was the widower of a wealthy woman with three daughters (Moira Lister, Faith Brook and Patricia Goddard), obviously trying to steal their estate, and possibly murdered by one. Lister and Brook don't get along, with Lister deliciously monstrous, sneering every line as if venom filled her veins, not blood. In a great supporting role, veteran actor Barry Jones steals every moment he's onscreen, his presence providing much humor and powerful dominance as a Scotland Yard inspector who enjoys sparring with Rennie. Great art decco sets, fascinating supporting characters and a brassy musical theme helps this rise above the typical British programmer, and kept me excited and guessing what would happen. All the elements of noir are there, with great dark female characters that are absolutely fascinating.
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