Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueDischarged by his employer, a private eye stays on a jewel theft case after a model with information for him is murdered.Discharged by his employer, a private eye stays on a jewel theft case after a model with information for him is murdered.Discharged by his employer, a private eye stays on a jewel theft case after a model with information for him is murdered.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
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Despite the title it's not a vampire film but a talkative drama set around a fashion house and refers to the colour of a fabric. Tom Conway plays a laconic detective called - guess what? - 'Tom Conway' and apart from the rather petulant looking models the scariest thing is probably Eric Pohlmann's ferocious haircut.
Private Eye Tom Conway is checking into a jewel theft at a fashion house when a corpse shows up. An appropriately tangled mystery develops, but it's handled in such a dull fashion that I didn't follow it fully. Conway wanders about like he wish he were back at the RKO lot performing in his brother's cast-offs. Roger Delgado -- best remembered as the first "Master" on Doctor Who has a bit of fun bluffing his henchmen, and there are some nice-looking women playing dress models, but it's all handled so efficiently that there's nothing worthwhile.
I don't think the same Christine Forest from "Monkey Shines" or "Dawn of the dead" was in this unless she was a baby/ infant. Look up the title where it shows cast pics and it shows her husband , who probably would have been old enough to have been in this.
No great analysis needed here...a solid mystery with Tom Conway playing a private detective, ex-FBI, named...Tom Conway! The plot involves a jewel heist in the fashion industry, a crime that eventually grows into two murders. Conway is eventually asked to drop the case, and of course there is no better way to get a movie detective to devote himself to a case then to drop him from it! This was made during the period in the early 50s when Hammer made a number of low-budget mystery programmers with American stars such as Dane Clark and Forrest Tucker and Alex Nicol and Tom Conway (although we yanks think of him as British because of the accent, any time I see a British reference to him, he's called "american star Tom Conway," no doubt because his film success was here in the US). This one is a solid piece of work, which plays much like a 50s crime TV show. By this time Conway could play a detective in his sleep, and he lends his usual touch of jaded class to the film. The supporting cast is colorful, and as always director Terence Fisher keeps things moving quickly. Recommended to mystery and/or Tom Conway fans. Nothing special or original here otherwise...
Is this a record? Barely five minutes in and I was already becoming disengaged from this tedious, talky, turkey. Less than an hour later and a suitable get out clause appears to be beckoning. If all concerned had simply signed on the dotted line, we would have been spared a further thirty minutes of this dreck. Yes! Thirty minutes, as in extra time at the end of a drab, dreary, scrappy game between two teams, who inspire little enthusiasm or passion.
It's a jewel theft caper, which soon escalates into a murder case. Enter suave, debonair private investigator, Tom Conway (just as big a pain in the neck for the cops, as he is for the criminals) sporting a top of the range raincoat, with a belt that could circumnavigate his waist twice over and sufficient material in the extravagant collar, sundry flaps, pads and lapels to make another coat.
The fact that Conway is cast as...er...Tom Conway, in itself, indicates the movie's paucity of imagination, flair, purpose, substance and drive, coupled with an arrant failure to grasp the rudiments of building tension and suspense. No!....Don't even ask about excitement.
Even the final, unanticipated plot twist only marginally raises the temperature of this tepid, tiresome yarn. This film contains scenes that some viewers may find about as riveting as watching paint dry.
MEMORABLE MOMENT: Eileen Way's visionary insight on the future of Australian Rock. "He's not a punk. He's a Go Between."
It's a jewel theft caper, which soon escalates into a murder case. Enter suave, debonair private investigator, Tom Conway (just as big a pain in the neck for the cops, as he is for the criminals) sporting a top of the range raincoat, with a belt that could circumnavigate his waist twice over and sufficient material in the extravagant collar, sundry flaps, pads and lapels to make another coat.
The fact that Conway is cast as...er...Tom Conway, in itself, indicates the movie's paucity of imagination, flair, purpose, substance and drive, coupled with an arrant failure to grasp the rudiments of building tension and suspense. No!....Don't even ask about excitement.
Even the final, unanticipated plot twist only marginally raises the temperature of this tepid, tiresome yarn. This film contains scenes that some viewers may find about as riveting as watching paint dry.
MEMORABLE MOMENT: Eileen Way's visionary insight on the future of Australian Rock. "He's not a punk. He's a Go Between."
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesTowards the end of the film, the 'villain' played by Eric Pohlmann is on the run. He seems surprised and concerned to see two uniformed 'Bobbies' as he exits a telephone box. Perhaps he should have chosen somewhere else to have made a call from as the location is on the Albert Embankment, just over the River from the Houses of Parliament and Scotland Yard. Thus a number of Police might be expected in the vicinity.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Louder Than Rock (2023)
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- 3 Stops to Murder
- Lieux de tournage
- Bray Studios, Down Place, Oakley Green, Berkshire, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(as Exclusive Studios, Bray)
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 16 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was Blood Orange (1953) officially released in Canada in English?
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