Derek Farr and his wife Patricia Plunkett are having another fight after Farr comes back home from another one of his flings. Plunkett decides enough is enough and leaves him. Farr ends up getting drunk in a nightclub with their landlord Dennis Price, who leaves for home again soon after. But not after introducing Farr to hostess Joan Dowling, and he ends up driving her home. One thing leads to another and they end up in Farr's apartment. Plunkett in the meantime has cooled down and calls home, to say she's coming back. Dowling overhears it and there is another fight, with Farr pushing Dowling away who hits her head on a table. Farr panics and shoves her body inside an ottoman. Price noticed the noise from upstairs and decides to have a look, and senses something is not quite right. A cat and mouse game ensues, but not all is what it seems, least of all for Farr.
This movie's the 2nd movie adaptation of a play written by J. Lee Thompson ('The Guns Of Navarone', 'Cape Fear'), who also directed this movie, his first. It explains why the movie plays out primarily in the Farr/Plunkett apartment. Comparisons can easily be made between this movie and Hitchcock's 'Rope', with the body hidden in plain sight in a piece of furniture, and an outsider smelling something fishy. Fun trivia, Dennis Price played in the first (TV) version of 'Rope', from 1939. In any case, Thompson does well here, the stage-y nature of the story doesn't slow down this movie, nor does the movie feel like a 'Rope' copy. It is well-made, tense, and also looks rather nice, with some good cinematography by William McLeod ('Alibi', 'Guilt Is My Shadow'). Despite being a Britnoir, there is an American voice-over who gives a weird, almost anecdotal narration at various points in the movie, proclaiming at the end of the movie he has to fly home again. It is a quirky touch, that did feel slightly out of place, but wasn't annoying.
The 4 main characters, who are also the only credited ones, give good performances. Price ('Dear Murderer') turns up his posh British accent a notch above usual, while Farr ('Double Confession') is great as the panic-stricken man trying to think things through. Plunkett ('It Always Rains On Sunday') and Dowling ('For Them That Trespass') are a bit underused. I would've liked to have seen more of Dowling who does a great 'common' hostess who uses her looks and charm to try and move up in life.
The movie has various twists and turns along the way, and a very ironic finale and ending (which I'm not sure would've passed the censors had it been made in the US). While it's nothing too noir-ish, it does provide some nice entertainment with good performances and excellent dialogue. Recommended. 7/10
This movie's the 2nd movie adaptation of a play written by J. Lee Thompson ('The Guns Of Navarone', 'Cape Fear'), who also directed this movie, his first. It explains why the movie plays out primarily in the Farr/Plunkett apartment. Comparisons can easily be made between this movie and Hitchcock's 'Rope', with the body hidden in plain sight in a piece of furniture, and an outsider smelling something fishy. Fun trivia, Dennis Price played in the first (TV) version of 'Rope', from 1939. In any case, Thompson does well here, the stage-y nature of the story doesn't slow down this movie, nor does the movie feel like a 'Rope' copy. It is well-made, tense, and also looks rather nice, with some good cinematography by William McLeod ('Alibi', 'Guilt Is My Shadow'). Despite being a Britnoir, there is an American voice-over who gives a weird, almost anecdotal narration at various points in the movie, proclaiming at the end of the movie he has to fly home again. It is a quirky touch, that did feel slightly out of place, but wasn't annoying.
The 4 main characters, who are also the only credited ones, give good performances. Price ('Dear Murderer') turns up his posh British accent a notch above usual, while Farr ('Double Confession') is great as the panic-stricken man trying to think things through. Plunkett ('It Always Rains On Sunday') and Dowling ('For Them That Trespass') are a bit underused. I would've liked to have seen more of Dowling who does a great 'common' hostess who uses her looks and charm to try and move up in life.
The movie has various twists and turns along the way, and a very ironic finale and ending (which I'm not sure would've passed the censors had it been made in the US). While it's nothing too noir-ish, it does provide some nice entertainment with good performances and excellent dialogue. Recommended. 7/10