No Way Back (1949) Poster

(1949)

User Reviews

Review this title
5 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
5/10
Lacklustre addition to U.K. post-War 'Spiv' movie cycle
noir guy20 August 2001
Unfortunately, documentary filmmaker Stefan Osieki's foray into fictional form results in a lacklustre addition to the U.K. post-War Spiv' movie cycle (a series of films with roots in the U.S. Gangster films of the 30s, but with a far more negative and unglamourised portrayal of their criminal protagonists). When over the hill former lightweight boxing champion Johnnie 'The Croucher' Thompson loses a fight and the sight of one eye to a younger opponent, he is forced to give up his ring career and retires on a pittance once his grasping manager has whittled down his purse and outstanding career winnings. Dumped by his brassy wife, Johnnie sinks to the bottom of a whisky bottle before being hoisted back on his feet by unsavoury East End villain Jack Sleat, whose girlfriend Beryl soon warms to Johnnie's innate good-heartedness (perhaps because he reminds her of the decent life she's left behind). When Jack gets wise to this burgeoning relationship, he seeks to set up Johnnie in a jewel robbery, and things take several turns for the worse for the various characters who find themselves on the wrong side of the law. With naturalistic post-War London street locations, complete with glimpses of the blitzed city settings, this is rooted in a distinctly grimy low-life milieu. However, it seems that director Osieki is more content with larding on the tragic grandeur complete with staging techniques out of Greek tragedy (e.g. offscreen confrontations with the forces of law and order, and an unseen jewel robbery - an influence on RESERVOIR DOGS, perhaps!), and a mise-en-scene which seems to be striving for an East End rendition of the French street poetry as evidenced in the likes of LE JOUR SE LEVE. Unfortunately, given its relatively routine tale, this film ultimately fails to exert much dramatic grip beyond the predictably melodramatic, and with little to lift it out of the ordinary, remains fairly run of the mill stuff and not a patch on the likes of other lesser known post-War U.K. 'Spiv' movies such as NOOSE or DANCING WITH CRIME. Still, relative scarcity makes it worthy of passing interest, even if the often low-key moodiness fails to engage the emotions over the relatively brief running time.
6 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
The Yanks could have done it so much better
davidvmcgillivray-24-90581115 February 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Tough little British B-film with ambitions far beyond Polish director Stefan Osiecki's ability. (He never directed another film). He completely screws up the climax (shot, if I'm not mistaken, against the bare walls of Nettlefold Studios), which leaves us wondering, "Here are three people trapped in a warehouse. It can't be that difficult to flush them out." Just as a matter of interest, the continuity errors are staggering. The gang boss draws a diagram in dust on top of the pub table; seconds later it's gone. Chief points of appeal are Terence De Marney and Eleanor Summerfield, who were good but never quite had that extra something needed for stardom, and lots of location work that shows London's Docklands still bombed to smithereens. Denis Shaw is unbilled as a boxing second.
3 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Ridiculous climax
malcolmgsw7 March 2016
The first couple of reels lead you to believe that this is going to be another of the boxing dramas which were popular at the time.Although the portrayal of John Sales as a boxing promoter is badly acted and shifts of anti semitism.After Terence De Marneylooses the fight and sight of an eye it lurches into noir territory.De Marneys liaison with Eleanor Summerfield is very reminiscent of They Live By Night.There are some interesting location shots of post war London.The market might be Petticoat Lane.As has been mentioned by other reviewers the climax is poorly played out.The police fire tear gas into the room and De Marney breaks a window to let the gas out.It is all nonsensical and lacking in any original thought or idea
4 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Badly composed and making little sense
daniele-iannarelli1 June 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Started off reasonably well, but became ridiculous particularly on the introduction of the 'gang', and Croucher's subsequent liaison.

This, frankly, seemed like a poor attempt in rivalling similar (but better) American movies such as "White Heat" (1948).

The story was poorly contrived and didn't make a lot of sense from the point the police entered the fray... especially the final shoot-out.
2 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Beryl and the Croucher
richardchatten7 April 2020
A raw little drama enhanced by excellent location work by cameraman Robert Navarro of London in the winter of 1949 still bearing the scars of the blitz and the burden of postwar austerity.

Produced and co.written by Derrick De Marney as a vehicle for his brother Terrence when he was still young enough for the resemblance to be apparent to his debonair elder brother when smartened up (while the wild-eyed character actor he returned as in the sixties can be seen in his disheveled moments).

Eleanor Summerfield looks little younger here than she did twenty years later, but is allowed to be both touching and glamorous.
2 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed