Agrega una trama en tu idiomaMurder unfolds around a young girl who sleepwalks and talks while she does so.Murder unfolds around a young girl who sleepwalks and talks while she does so.Murder unfolds around a young girl who sleepwalks and talks while she does so.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
Fotos
John More
- Man in Pub
- (sin créditos)
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
This a truly lethargic film.It fails to entertain on any level.Richard Content is the parachuted in American actor,well past his prime,and too old for his part.Terry film is interminably talkie with very little action.There is a car chase thrown in at the end to provide some excitement at the climax.Presumably this served as a bottom of the bill support.
The film stars Richard Conte, with support from a British cast.
Conte's sister has disappeared; in fact, she is murdered and buried before we see the opening credits, so some of the suspense is quickly gone. Conte's aunt just happens to know a 17-year-old named Annie Jones (Francesca Annis) who can "find things." Halfway through the film the audience is let in on pretty much everything, so there goes the rest of the suspense.
Everyone does their job competently, but it's interesting to see Conte constantly making sarcastic remarks. He also spends most of the film in a state of sexual arousal.
Conte's sister has disappeared; in fact, she is murdered and buried before we see the opening credits, so some of the suspense is quickly gone. Conte's aunt just happens to know a 17-year-old named Annie Jones (Francesca Annis) who can "find things." Halfway through the film the audience is let in on pretty much everything, so there goes the rest of the suspense.
Everyone does their job competently, but it's interesting to see Conte constantly making sarcastic remarks. He also spends most of the film in a state of sexual arousal.
The Eyes of Annie Jones is a quirky film, not strong on suspense but interesting in its own right. A woman is murdered in a small UK town and the body hidden. Her Aunt Helen requests the presence of the woman's brother and his wife, as she feels foul play is afoot. The Aunt then enlists the aid of a psychic yet troubled teenage orphan, Annie Jones, to help locate the missing woman. Conflict ensues.
Though described elsewhere as a whodunit, the murderer is revealed in the opening scene and the full motives well before the ending. The drama instead comes from the way in which the mystery is solved and through the interactions of the characters, often in oddly forced histrionics. Pacing is also an issue... slow and awkward throughout with stiff staging. This is offset some by the eerie score and the not always predictable story.
The cast is entirely English, save for the bizarrely miscast Richard Conte as David Wheeler, the ne'er-do-well brother of the murdered Geraldine. His New York personality is explained away through weak exposition, as he was shipped off by his father to America at an early age. Otherwise the acting is acceptable, though truly weird at times thanks to extreme character reverses and forced dialog. These moments, for me, were almost brilliantly surreal, though surely unintended.
Veteran actress Francesca Annis is the highlight of the film, as the psychic orphan Annie Jones. Her working class accent comes and goes at random, but her psycho-sexual intensity and erratic personality shifts make up for other failings. The paranormal occurrences are unfortunately few, and in particular the trance scenes seem lifted from another, better movie. But it's through her character that the film gains a creepy edge.
Overall a periodically intriguing B-movie curiosity. If you can get past the miscast lead, slow pace, weak dialog moments, unmotivated character shifts, etc., then worth a look.
Though described elsewhere as a whodunit, the murderer is revealed in the opening scene and the full motives well before the ending. The drama instead comes from the way in which the mystery is solved and through the interactions of the characters, often in oddly forced histrionics. Pacing is also an issue... slow and awkward throughout with stiff staging. This is offset some by the eerie score and the not always predictable story.
The cast is entirely English, save for the bizarrely miscast Richard Conte as David Wheeler, the ne'er-do-well brother of the murdered Geraldine. His New York personality is explained away through weak exposition, as he was shipped off by his father to America at an early age. Otherwise the acting is acceptable, though truly weird at times thanks to extreme character reverses and forced dialog. These moments, for me, were almost brilliantly surreal, though surely unintended.
Veteran actress Francesca Annis is the highlight of the film, as the psychic orphan Annie Jones. Her working class accent comes and goes at random, but her psycho-sexual intensity and erratic personality shifts make up for other failings. The paranormal occurrences are unfortunately few, and in particular the trance scenes seem lifted from another, better movie. But it's through her character that the film gains a creepy edge.
Overall a periodically intriguing B-movie curiosity. If you can get past the miscast lead, slow pace, weak dialog moments, unmotivated character shifts, etc., then worth a look.
The Eyes of Annie Jones (1964)
* 1/2 (out of 4)
After a woman is murdered and her body hidden, another lady hires psychic Annie Jones (Francesca Annis) to try and find out who the killer is. Annie, a teenaged girl, isn't your typical psychic as she also has a sleepwalking problem, which might help with the case. THE EYES OF ANNIE JONES has a pretty weak story that one would have a hard time building a twenty-minute short around let alone a feature length film. Even at just 73-minutes this film really drags its feet with non-stop boring dialogue and an ending that is pretty disappointing as well. I'm really not sure what they were trying to do with this thing but perhaps they just wanted to make a film around this teenaged character in hopes that more films could follow. Whatever the reason, there's not enough story here to carry the picture and after a good opening sequence showing the murder, we're then treated to a bunch of scenes with people talking on and on about stuff that just isn't all that interesting. This includes the creepy David Wheeler (Richard Conte) and his attraction to the young girl. The Annie Jones character has some interesting things about her, including the sleepwalking, but nothing ever really comes to life. The performances are good for the most part with Conte and Joyce Carey doing a nice job. Annis was very much good in the role and she's certainly watchable but it's too bad she wasn't given more. Director Reginald Le Borg (THE BLACK SLEEP) can also take some of the blame as the film looks pretty flat and there's just no energy to be found in it.
* 1/2 (out of 4)
After a woman is murdered and her body hidden, another lady hires psychic Annie Jones (Francesca Annis) to try and find out who the killer is. Annie, a teenaged girl, isn't your typical psychic as she also has a sleepwalking problem, which might help with the case. THE EYES OF ANNIE JONES has a pretty weak story that one would have a hard time building a twenty-minute short around let alone a feature length film. Even at just 73-minutes this film really drags its feet with non-stop boring dialogue and an ending that is pretty disappointing as well. I'm really not sure what they were trying to do with this thing but perhaps they just wanted to make a film around this teenaged character in hopes that more films could follow. Whatever the reason, there's not enough story here to carry the picture and after a good opening sequence showing the murder, we're then treated to a bunch of scenes with people talking on and on about stuff that just isn't all that interesting. This includes the creepy David Wheeler (Richard Conte) and his attraction to the young girl. The Annie Jones character has some interesting things about her, including the sleepwalking, but nothing ever really comes to life. The performances are good for the most part with Conte and Joyce Carey doing a nice job. Annis was very much good in the role and she's certainly watchable but it's too bad she wasn't given more. Director Reginald Le Borg (THE BLACK SLEEP) can also take some of the blame as the film looks pretty flat and there's just no energy to be found in it.
In spite of an obvious lack of means ,a thriller ahead of its time: from "the eyes of Laura Mars " to countless profilers with extrasensory powers , this potboiler for the great film noir character actor Richard Conte is interesting mainly for its subject .Treatment fails to sustain a real suspense.
For instance,the first sequence is a spoiler ,and mars the plot :it would have been better not to explain the disappearance of the victim in the first place ;besides Francesca Annis does not possess Pamela Franklin's mystery and magnetism (see" the third secret" or our mother's house") .And Richard Conte was able to portray a subtler character ,although his lines are not devoid of humor ("she 's more able to swallow Margaret 's cooking than the victim's aura!")
Reginald Le Borg's works, although often made on small budgets,are sometimes worth to have a look at: "destiny " (1944;co-directed with French Julien Duvivier) "the flight that disappeared" ( the moral of which is not unlike that of "the day the Earth stood still" or his Maupassant adaptation ("diary of a madman ,loosely based on "le horlà")
For instance,the first sequence is a spoiler ,and mars the plot :it would have been better not to explain the disappearance of the victim in the first place ;besides Francesca Annis does not possess Pamela Franklin's mystery and magnetism (see" the third secret" or our mother's house") .And Richard Conte was able to portray a subtler character ,although his lines are not devoid of humor ("she 's more able to swallow Margaret 's cooking than the victim's aura!")
Reginald Le Borg's works, although often made on small budgets,are sometimes worth to have a look at: "destiny " (1944;co-directed with French Julien Duvivier) "the flight that disappeared" ( the moral of which is not unlike that of "the day the Earth stood still" or his Maupassant adaptation ("diary of a madman ,loosely based on "le horlà")
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaMara Purcell, playing the orphanage matron, was in real life, Francesca Annis's mother.
Selecciones populares
Inicia sesión para calificar y agrega a la lista de videos para obtener recomendaciones personalizadas
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- Países de origen
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- Annie Jonesi silmad
- Locaciones de filmación
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 13 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.85 : 1
Contribuir a esta página
Sugiere una edición o agrega el contenido que falta
Principales brechas de datos
By what name was The Eyes of Annie Jones (1963) officially released in India in English?
Responda