Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA signalman on a quay sees a fight between two men. One of the men is deliberately pushed into the water and the signalman cannot save him, but decides to keep his suitcase which he later fi... Tout lireA signalman on a quay sees a fight between two men. One of the men is deliberately pushed into the water and the signalman cannot save him, but decides to keep his suitcase which he later finds is full of banknotes with a value of £5000.A signalman on a quay sees a fight between two men. One of the men is deliberately pushed into the water and the signalman cannot save him, but decides to keep his suitcase which he later finds is full of banknotes with a value of £5000.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 1 nomination au total
- Stationmaster
- (as Edward Lexey)
- Customer in Butcher's Shop
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
Newton plays a train signalman, Bert Mallison. One night he witnesses a fight between two men, one of whom is pushed into the water. Mallison goes out to try and save him, but only recovers the man's suitcase. It's loaded with money.
Mallison plans on calling the police, but when his boss yells at him, he changes his mind. He goes home and hides it. He doesn't touch the money, but since it's there, he dips into his savings to buy new clothes for his daughter (Barton) and take her to an amusement park.
At the amusement park, they attend the show The Vanishing Mermaid. She is Camelia (Simone Simon) in a bathing suit who is dunked in water and disappears. When Mallison observes her boss being abusive, he runs in to protect her. Later, he runs into her at the pub. She is very kind to Betty, his daughter, who gives her their address.
Unfortunately, Betty is overheard by Brown (Hartnell), the thief who killed the man and wants the suitcase. He is already suspicious of Mallison - after all, he had a birdseye view of the proceedings and seems to be throwing money around.
A French police officer, Dupre (Marcel Dalio) has come to England to recover the money, which is from a casino heist. So he is putting pressure on a desperate Brown.
The situation becomes complicated when Camelia becomes involved and finds out about the money.
This is a very good film, a real noir, the story of a lonely widower trying to be a single dad who sees two glittering baubles - money and a woman - and fights with his conscience so he can have both. Both mean trouble.
Robert Newton is excellent and sympathetic as Mallison, and Barton does a wonderful job as his daughter. The beautiful, seductive Simon is convincing as a cool, ruthless golddigger. All of the acting is very effective.
For a bit of trivia, Margaret Barton, despite looking like a young teen in this film was 21 at the time and often played younger roles due to her size. Born in 1926, she was married to actor Raymond James, for 47 years, until his death. In 2018, at the age of 92, she married again. She and her husband are believed to be Britain's oldest newlyweds.
It's quite an entertaining film that is acted well with several story lines intertwining. French carnival performer Simone Simon (Camelia) provides the love interest whilst Hartnell is after the suitcase of cash and is on Newton's tail.
If I found a suitcase with £5,000, I'd keep it. No need to think about that part. How to spend it becomes the issue. What does Newton do.....? ..............Doh!
We were delighted to be instrumental, together with Jonathan Duvall, to arrange a one night screening of the the only print(then at the BFI) of this film at The Silver Screen Cinema Folkestone.
I tried to find some of the locals, kindly assisted by John Gale local fisherman, who had appeared as extras to attend too. This was 2012 and pre-digitising of the print.
Robert Newton was said to be partial to a drink on set!
It is a classic film noir and great shots of the sleepy fishing village that is now a bustling resort. As a Dr. Who fan - it is also interesting to see William Hartnell in a very different role.
Can decency survive in a Film Noir world? Oh, easy enough for someone like Bogart, I suppose, who's sampled the world and found it wanting, or Robert Mitchum, who can barely open his eyes to see, let alone want. But what is a little man like Robert Newton to do? He seems to be unaware there is anything outside his poor, little world, until he finds his daughter scrubbing floors in a butcher shop, the butcher's wife shouting at her, and he realizes that with this money, she doesn't have to do that. She can have that new dress, they can go to the fair and see Simone Simon, the Atomic Mermaid, and maybe he can have her too....
There's something sleazy and slipshod about the best of British film noir that makes it much more compelling; there's an air of desperation about it, of little men slipping through the cracks that the relative richness of American noir never noticed, outside of a few like Gordon Wiles' THE GANGSTER. With supporting players like William Hartnell and Marcel Dalio, this one has it.
Le saviez-vous
- GaffesContrary to Mallison's fatalism, under English law he has a cast-iron self-defence case, and he is probably entitled to a reward for recovering the money. There might be a case against him for attempted theft, but it might not have been prosecuted given that he recovered and returned all of it eventually.
- Citations
Bert Mallison: Now look here Betty. Don't you start makin' excuses for something you've done wrong. That never got no-one nowhere. Once you start doin' that, it's the thin end o' the wedge, see? And don't let me catch you out over anything like this again. Is that clear Betty?
- ConnexionsReferenced in Simone Simon, la rebelle (2012)
Meilleurs choix
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Temptation Harbor
- Lieux de tournage
- Folkestone Harbour, Folkestone, Kent, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(Newhaven Harbour)
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 31 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1