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6.3/10
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TU CALIFICACIÓN
Agrega una trama en tu idiomaA British-American returns to Britain after 20 years to discover that his father has been jailed since WW2 for a murder that took place in murky circumstances.A British-American returns to Britain after 20 years to discover that his father has been jailed since WW2 for a murder that took place in murky circumstances.A British-American returns to Britain after 20 years to discover that his father has been jailed since WW2 for a murder that took place in murky circumstances.
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Van Johnson was evacuated from Liverpool to the United States during the Second World War. His mother died young and he is working his way around the world before he settles down to a career in electronics. He doesn't know what became of his father, so he makes enquiries. He discovers he has been in prison for sixteen years for strangling a young girl. He investigates and finds cracks in the official story, even as officials make it difficult for him to find out anything.
Something has gone awry in this production. Van Johnson, at 43, was too old for his role, and the scriptwriters, working from an A.J. Cronin novel, put a lot of English usage in his mouth, instead of American. The pace is erratic, and the subplot involving Vera Miles, with whom he has fallen in love, seems like to be added to the story, without contributing to it.
That is not to say that there are not some strengths to this move. Bernard Miles, everyone's favorite M from the James Bond series, is brilliant as Johnson's father, brutalized by years of prison. Emlyn Williams is also around, playing a creepy man to perfection. Anthony Newlands as a newspaperman who gets the investigation moving and connects the dots, is a godsend to this movie. It's too bad they can't make this obviously good story into a good movie.
Something has gone awry in this production. Van Johnson, at 43, was too old for his role, and the scriptwriters, working from an A.J. Cronin novel, put a lot of English usage in his mouth, instead of American. The pace is erratic, and the subplot involving Vera Miles, with whom he has fallen in love, seems like to be added to the story, without contributing to it.
That is not to say that there are not some strengths to this move. Bernard Miles, everyone's favorite M from the James Bond series, is brilliant as Johnson's father, brutalized by years of prison. Emlyn Williams is also around, playing a creepy man to perfection. Anthony Newlands as a newspaperman who gets the investigation moving and connects the dots, is a godsend to this movie. It's too bad they can't make this obviously good story into a good movie.
Jack Cardiff proved his Oscar-winning adaptation was no mere flash in the pan with this powerful drama based on a novel by A. J. Cronin atmospherically set in Liverpool. It pulls no punches in depicting the callousness and disregard of the establishment as they close ranks when they stand to lose political capital from the exposure of a miscarriage of justice.
Bernard Lee is unforgettable as the hero's father coarsened by nearly twenty years in prison for a crime he didn't commit, and Vera Miles has an offbeat role as a woman who befriends the hero but with an aversion to being touched which provides added complexity to an already tense tale.
Bernard Lee is unforgettable as the hero's father coarsened by nearly twenty years in prison for a crime he didn't commit, and Vera Miles has an offbeat role as a woman who befriends the hero but with an aversion to being touched which provides added complexity to an already tense tale.
Beyond This Place (AKA: Web of Evidence) is directed by Jack Cardiff and adapted to screenplay by Ken Taylor from the A.J. Cronin novel. It stars Van Johnson, Vera Miles, Emlyn Williams, Bernard Lee and Jean Kent. Music is by Douglas Gamley and cinematography by Wilkie Cooper.
Paul Mathry (Johnson) was evacuated from Liverpool to America during WWII. Twenty years later he is back in Liverpool believing his father had died a hero during the conflict. The reality is that his father, Patrick (Lee), has been serving a prison sentence for the murder of his pregnant mistress. But something doesn't seem right about the trial, so Paul does a little digging...
Not a great deal to get excited about here, it's a routine mystery - cum - thriller, that is based in Liverpool (not London as some reviewers elsewhere seem to think) but drafts in two American name actors to supposedly perk things up. It never really gets off the ground for dramatic impact, sending Johnson on a mission of truth and justice without ever really putting him in jeopardy. While his relationship with Miles' troubled Lena Anderson is a subplot of no consequence, as is her back story which is sad but isn't given any dramatic heft.
On the plus side is oodles of noirish atmosphere, various camera workings of substance and scene staging that lift proceedings. Night scenes are suitably cloaked with an air of unease, be it blinking pelican lights or spinning shadow lamps, Cardiff and Cooper get the most out of the meagre budget. Other sequences see a shot through distorted glass and one excellent one that has Kent framed in striped surroundings - while she is wearing a leopard skin coat, the contrast of which suits her character perfectly.
Value here for noir visualists, but instantly forgettable once the berserker finale has played itself out. 6/10
Tidbid: James Bond fans will note that it sees Lee and Geoffrey Keen together, they both would later feature in a number of Bond movies.
Paul Mathry (Johnson) was evacuated from Liverpool to America during WWII. Twenty years later he is back in Liverpool believing his father had died a hero during the conflict. The reality is that his father, Patrick (Lee), has been serving a prison sentence for the murder of his pregnant mistress. But something doesn't seem right about the trial, so Paul does a little digging...
Not a great deal to get excited about here, it's a routine mystery - cum - thriller, that is based in Liverpool (not London as some reviewers elsewhere seem to think) but drafts in two American name actors to supposedly perk things up. It never really gets off the ground for dramatic impact, sending Johnson on a mission of truth and justice without ever really putting him in jeopardy. While his relationship with Miles' troubled Lena Anderson is a subplot of no consequence, as is her back story which is sad but isn't given any dramatic heft.
On the plus side is oodles of noirish atmosphere, various camera workings of substance and scene staging that lift proceedings. Night scenes are suitably cloaked with an air of unease, be it blinking pelican lights or spinning shadow lamps, Cardiff and Cooper get the most out of the meagre budget. Other sequences see a shot through distorted glass and one excellent one that has Kent framed in striped surroundings - while she is wearing a leopard skin coat, the contrast of which suits her character perfectly.
Value here for noir visualists, but instantly forgettable once the berserker finale has played itself out. 6/10
Tidbid: James Bond fans will note that it sees Lee and Geoffrey Keen together, they both would later feature in a number of Bond movies.
During the blitz a boy and his mother are evacuated to America. Returning to Liverpool in 1959, the now-grown boy (Van Johnson) learnes his father was not a war hero but a convicted murderer who is still alive.
Two American stars (Johnson and Vera Miles) and a passel of familiar British supporting players. An AJ. Cronin novel.
I wish Hitchcock had done it. But we can't judge a movie by what it isn't, but what it is.
The movie has lots of British officialdom stonewalling, Van Johnson in constantly angry mode, and no sense of humor. With all the potentially wacky Btitish types what might Sir Alfred . . . Sorry.
Lots of twists and uncovered secrets, but it all comes off as kind of blah though there is one shocking shot of a road accident.
Two American stars (Johnson and Vera Miles) and a passel of familiar British supporting players. An AJ. Cronin novel.
I wish Hitchcock had done it. But we can't judge a movie by what it isn't, but what it is.
The movie has lots of British officialdom stonewalling, Van Johnson in constantly angry mode, and no sense of humor. With all the potentially wacky Btitish types what might Sir Alfred . . . Sorry.
Lots of twists and uncovered secrets, but it all comes off as kind of blah though there is one shocking shot of a road accident.
Polite note to user Robert J Maxwell of New Mexico.No sir, Bernard Lee was not "Q" but "M" from the first Bond film "Dr No" of 1962."Q" was played by Welsh actor Desmond Llewlynn.Now that's cleared up, I too received this DVD from an internet site I recently discovered and which I can heartily recommend: "myrarefilms.co.uk".
During the film I was mentally running through the mathematics of the age of Van Johnson's character.In the segment set during the Liverpool blitz of 1941 he was 10 years old.Move forward to 1959 (after he had been shipped off to the States to explain his American accent) which is 18 years later (the date of this film) and he would therefore be 28.There is no way Van Johnson looked this age, at best more like 35.Maybe his character aged prematurely!That said this is a good suspense film that keeps you guessing until segment 20/20 when the real murderer is revealed and I rated it worthy of 7/10.
During the film I was mentally running through the mathematics of the age of Van Johnson's character.In the segment set during the Liverpool blitz of 1941 he was 10 years old.Move forward to 1959 (after he had been shipped off to the States to explain his American accent) which is 18 years later (the date of this film) and he would therefore be 28.There is no way Van Johnson looked this age, at best more like 35.Maybe his character aged prematurely!That said this is a good suspense film that keeps you guessing until segment 20/20 when the real murderer is revealed and I rated it worthy of 7/10.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe character Van Johnson plays is supposed to be in his mid-20s, but Johnson was 43 when the film appeared.
- ConexionesReferenced in Ken Adam: Designing Bond (2000)
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 30 minutos
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- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was Trama siniestra (1959) officially released in India in English?
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