Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuLinda Harrison is about to divorce her husband for desertion so that she will be free to marry a young doctor.Linda Harrison is about to divorce her husband for desertion so that she will be free to marry a young doctor.Linda Harrison is about to divorce her husband for desertion so that she will be free to marry a young doctor.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
Fotos
Henry B. Longhurst
- Butler
- (as Henry Longhearst)
Ian Fleming
- Commander Hewitt
- (Nicht genannt)
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The delightful and elegant Rona Anderson, pops up as the wife who is seeking a divorce from a husband, who she barely sees, but with a new man in her life, a respected doctor, played by Patrick Holt, life for her seems to be back on track again. However, her estranged husband, unfortunately gets murdered! The problem I had with this film, is that the characters never engage interest, nor are they believable, as they all come across as one dimensional. Feelings and emotions are never stirred as the actors seem to go through the motions. Patrick Holt seems to have a range of expressions that go from A to B, and his body language stays the same whatever the scene! He delivers his lines with effortless charm but without any conviction. He seems to drift from one scene to another as if on auto pilot! Rona Anderson's subterfuge of being a tabloid gossip reporter, as a way of tracking down the killer beggars belief, as her very middle class manners and demeanour wouldn't fool anyone! The film itself, which runs just over the hour, never allows the director to 'flesh out' the characters, and indeed the successful capture of the killer in the last ten minutes, seems to border on the ridiculous, since it lacks total credibility! This film is an exercise in middle class manners and will not get the pulses racing.
Circumstantial Evidence opens with a court case presided by Judge Carteret where the chief evidence against the accused is circumstantial. It could send her to the gallows.
Now the events of the trial mirrors that of the judge's son. Michael Carteret (Patrick Holt) is a doctor who has been seeing a married woman Linda Harrison (Rona Anderson.)
Her husband Steve re-enters her life and attempts blackmail. He has obtained some love letters and could make life difficult for him with the general medical council.
Later on, Michael and Steve get involved in a scuffle at the lodgings Steve is staying at. Another man who goes in alerts the police of Steve's death.
It is circumstantial evidence but Steve is the main suspect. Linda tries to clear his name.
This could had been a neat B thriller but it was obvious who the killer was if it was not Michael.
There was certainly a lack of a thorough police investigation but mainly because the writer wanted to draw parallels with the court case.
Some of the acting lacked emotion and range.
Now the events of the trial mirrors that of the judge's son. Michael Carteret (Patrick Holt) is a doctor who has been seeing a married woman Linda Harrison (Rona Anderson.)
Her husband Steve re-enters her life and attempts blackmail. He has obtained some love letters and could make life difficult for him with the general medical council.
Later on, Michael and Steve get involved in a scuffle at the lodgings Steve is staying at. Another man who goes in alerts the police of Steve's death.
It is circumstantial evidence but Steve is the main suspect. Linda tries to clear his name.
This could had been a neat B thriller but it was obvious who the killer was if it was not Michael.
There was certainly a lack of a thorough police investigation but mainly because the writer wanted to draw parallels with the court case.
Some of the acting lacked emotion and range.
A short, sharp fable of blackmail and murder characteristic of director Daniel Birt, painting a vivid picture of London in the summer of 1952 and largely carried by the elegant Rona Anderson; detailing how difficult it was in those days to wriggle out of a marriage gone sour.
' No, I am afraid she will get her pretty little neck stretched ' is one of the most repugnant statements about hanging a woman if found guilty of murder I have heard on film. I wanted to stop watching, but after this statement during a trial, and the conclusion that Capital Punishment was inevitable my interest grew. The evidence against her was based on circumstantial evidence, and most of the people at the trial including the judge believed such evidence was enough. I wondered how many people had been hung when they were innocent, and when the Judge's son falls foul of the law and the law believes even before a trial that he is guilty based again on similar circumstantial evidence I realised this film was none too subtle about such evidence convicting a man or woman in the early 1950's to death. A brave film for doing this. Rona Anderson, a fine actor, is the man's wife to be and she starts to uncover the true facts. I just wonder how many people went away from this film asking themselves questions about the law of the time, and being a less than an hour B film it moves along at a pace that they would not be bored by. The acting in general was good, and the filming simple showing viewers quite openly that the judicial system was faulty to say the least, and the attitudes concerning Capital Punishment casually brutal. The line of dialogue that I have quoted shows this clearly, with little hope for change in sight in court rooms. It took over a decade more for the abolishment of hanging in the UK.
The problem with this film is that you can guess what is going to happen within the first 10 minutes.So there is little suspense or even drama.With the exception of the blackmailer everyone goes through the motions in a very perfunctory manner.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesWhen Linda leaves Charlie Pott in the pub, she gives her phone number as "Whitehall 1212" and says "if a man answers, hang up." Charlie starts to repeat the number and write it down before looking up with dismay. Contemporary viewers would have readily got the joke: Whitehall 1212 was, famously, the number for Scotland Yard.
- PatzerJust over 30 minutes in, the police visit Harrison' place in broad daylight. She throws the key down from the window, again in broad daylight. When the policeman comes up, he says "Sorry to bother you at this time" and, out of her window, it's dark, with a light on in the window opposite.
- Zitate
Steve Harrison: The sooner we get hold of this, the sooner we get some folding money.
Rita Hanken: I've forgotten what it looks like.
Steve Harrison: The most beautiful sight in the world Rita.
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Sprache
- Auch bekannt als
- Evidence for Hire
- Drehorte
- Shepperton Studios, Shepperton, Surrey, England, Vereinigtes Königreich(made at 'London Film Studio Shepperton Middx.')
- Produktionsfirma
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 1 Minute
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.37 : 1
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