Agrega una trama en tu idiomaA wrongly accused convict returns home, only to be maligned again.A wrongly accused convict returns home, only to be maligned again.A wrongly accused convict returns home, only to be maligned again.
Hyma Beckley
- Man in Pub
- (sin créditos)
Carl Bernard
- Alfred Hamble
- (sin créditos)
Jim Brady
- Man in Pub
- (sin créditos)
Margot Bryant
- Villager
- (sin créditos)
Esma Cannon
- Screaming woman
- (sin créditos)
Barbara Cavan
- Mrs. Stribling
- (sin créditos)
Hilda Fenemore
- Pub Landlady
- (sin créditos)
Reginald Hearne
- Man Announcing Amy's Murder
- (sin créditos)
Opiniones destacadas
Before becoming known as THE LONG ROPE, director Wolf Rilla's THE LARGE ROPE meant that Donald Houston's central character, a young man released from jail and returning to his small hometown village, is basically caught right in the thick of it...
Not only does no one want him around, especially ex-girlfriend Susan Shaw and his former best friend she's marrying, but he winds up accused of murdering a flirtatious older woman played by an actress who made a living brilliantly playing them...
After Vanda Godsell's killed by a person she sees and we don't, what's a kind of frantic melodrama becomes a bonafide whodunnit, and Houston does a nice job frowning and arguing his way through various domiciles and a crowded pub full of drunks who basically want him dead...
Director Rilla, who'd later make another small town thriller in VILLAGE OF THE DAMNED, keeps the pace on a hectically intriguing level, and the British actors (including Robert Brown, Peter Byrne and Edward Judd) are topnotch, going beyond the minuscule budget - that actually suits the desperate one-street purgatory.
Not only does no one want him around, especially ex-girlfriend Susan Shaw and his former best friend she's marrying, but he winds up accused of murdering a flirtatious older woman played by an actress who made a living brilliantly playing them...
After Vanda Godsell's killed by a person she sees and we don't, what's a kind of frantic melodrama becomes a bonafide whodunnit, and Houston does a nice job frowning and arguing his way through various domiciles and a crowded pub full of drunks who basically want him dead...
Director Rilla, who'd later make another small town thriller in VILLAGE OF THE DAMNED, keeps the pace on a hectically intriguing level, and the British actors (including Robert Brown, Peter Byrne and Edward Judd) are topnotch, going beyond the minuscule budget - that actually suits the desperate one-street purgatory.
Donald Houston who plays Tom Penney, is released after three years from prison for a crime of serious assault, which he alleges he didn't commit. However, despite being 'inside' he rashly decides to return to the village where the young woman who accused him of assaulting her is still living. Needless to say many of the villagers are not so keen to 'forgive and forget' Penney's crime, and within a short while are not afraid to show their verbal hostility to the ex con. Matters are not helped when a young, attractive women is found strangled in the woods, and very quickly village suspicion turns to Penney. The storyline rattles along at a good pace and with the arrival of the police, Penney now faces the wrath of the village as well as intense questioning by the police. Sadly, it is at this point, that the storyline gets bogged down as if the director is looking for a way to develop a successful second half of the film but is uncertain how to sustain the drama, with the result that the film runs out of steam. The ending is frankly disappointing! The real killer was easy to identify, and the inept policing handling of the murder investigation is embarrassing. An Americans director would have given Houston more edge to his character as he becomes a potential victim of the village vigilante mob. Also, Houston would have been snarling at the police, as well as the villagers as his innocence is proved beyond doubt, An angry, rebellious Donald Houston, walking away at disgust at his accusers would have been thoroughly justified and merited, but the director decides to let the villagers off the hook. A lame ending to a film which could have been far more dramatic!
Donald Houston returns to his small town after two years in prison. He was sent there by the testimony of Vanda Godsell, who admits to him that she lied when she said he assaulted her, but what's a girl to do? When she goes missing, Scotland Yard in the person of Richard Warner investigates, but the town isn't willing to let justice take its leisurely course.
Good performers are in abundance - although one of them speaks uniquely in this film in stages West-County-Old-Coot accents. Neither are the crowd scenes well directed. Still, despite the patent set-up, it's a decent study in mob hysteria.
Good performers are in abundance - although one of them speaks uniquely in this film in stages West-County-Old-Coot accents. Neither are the crowd scenes well directed. Still, despite the patent set-up, it's a decent study in mob hysteria.
This film is one of my favourite low budget British mysteries from the 1950's. Houston stars as a man framed for a crime. He serves his time in prison and upon release goes back to the small rural town he grew up in. There, he is considered a crook and treated like an outcast. When a murder occurs in the town, everyone is quick to point their finger at him. Even the police believe he is guilty and a man hunt is initiated.
A small bit of fortune goes his way and he finds evidence that incriminates the real killer. Now it's a race against time as he tries to confront the real killer before he is captured by the police. This is a minor, low budget British mystery. But the performances are well above par, especially Mr. Houston, and I found this an enjoyable 70 minutes. STARS Donald Houston, Susan Shaw, Robert Brown, Peter Byrne, Richard Warner, Vanda Godsell.
A small bit of fortune goes his way and he finds evidence that incriminates the real killer. Now it's a race against time as he tries to confront the real killer before he is captured by the police. This is a minor, low budget British mystery. But the performances are well above par, especially Mr. Houston, and I found this an enjoyable 70 minutes. STARS Donald Houston, Susan Shaw, Robert Brown, Peter Byrne, Richard Warner, Vanda Godsell.
A subject as old of the hill : the ex-convict, unfairly imprisoned , who comes back to his native village where he is not the welcome; he is definitely an outcast, and his place is no longer among the well-respected people ;only his mother and his old flame still trusts him .
The movie is too short and too hurried for comfort ,but it is an estimable work : pay attention to the girlies the newcomer unwittingly scares, it's one the details which urges the villagers to take the law in their own hand ,after a murder which takes place just at the moment when the unfortunate young guy arrives .The chase across the streets which may lead to a lynching is the best moment ,but the ending seems botched .
The movie is too short and too hurried for comfort ,but it is an estimable work : pay attention to the girlies the newcomer unwittingly scares, it's one the details which urges the villagers to take the law in their own hand ,after a murder which takes place just at the moment when the unfortunate young guy arrives .The chase across the streets which may lead to a lynching is the best moment ,but the ending seems botched .
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaGlynn Houston was Welsh and never hid his accent. The film is set it seems in the West Country of the U.K. (Cornwall, Devon, Somerset or adjoining counties). The accents of the other actors range from East End of London to broad somewhere shire but no one else has a Welsh accent including the actors playing his parents.
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 12min(72 min)
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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