Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA pseudo-documentary in style with an emphasis on the daily work and routine of women police built around three different story lines. The first involves eighteen-year-old Bridget Foster (Pe... Tout lireA pseudo-documentary in style with an emphasis on the daily work and routine of women police built around three different story lines. The first involves eighteen-year-old Bridget Foster (Peggy Cummins) who is picked up for shoplifting, but let off lightly. She has a small child,... Tout lireA pseudo-documentary in style with an emphasis on the daily work and routine of women police built around three different story lines. The first involves eighteen-year-old Bridget Foster (Peggy Cummins) who is picked up for shoplifting, but let off lightly. She has a small child, an often-absent husband and mother-in-law trouble. To compound that, she takes up with a ... Tout lire
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Mrs. Muller
- (as Lilly Kann)
Avis à la une
The film is located in London and it is startling to see in the film early housing estates being used by the characters. It is a cliche in modern British films to have the housing estate as a nexus of crime and poverty. In this film they are look clean and the lifts work. The film has a similar feel to the classic Ealing film 'The Blue Lamp'.
The male actors are bland but the female actors are accomplished British performers, Rosamund John, Barbara Murray, Anne Crawford, Sarah Lawson, Eleanor Summerfield, Peggy Cummins etc. Dora Bryan and Thora Hird are hilarious in bit parts. Films like these from the fifties need re-appraisal as they are more than the sum of their parts. A modest but absorbing film, I'm pleased I picked it up in a sale at a video shop.
Muriel Box's earnest movie about the routines of modern low-level police work runs the gamut of situations, with a gradually increasing level of crime. Peggy Cummins, playing an 18-year-old, is one of the running links connecting crimes, as she goes from shoplifting, to a missing-person report filed by her husband, to the girl of a dangerous gangster.... wearing stolen jewelry.
It's a paean to routine paying off and muddling through, dealing with streetwalkers who don't want to be arrested by women, and one slice of cops on the take....: men cops, although whether the implication is that women are above that sort of thing, or lack the opportunity is unclear. Good directing and decent performances is the rule of the day in this movie, with Thora Hird given a small, funny bit when she accuses the police of luring small children in with treats.
Just mentioned that for our American readers.
I wonder if this film inspired The Bill ,it contains several stories like the tv drama did.
But to the film.
I had not seen this previously and have to say it was better than I might have expected.
I love The Blue Lamp but it is well known ,in comparison this film is obscure.
The acting in this is good in even the smallest parts.
The London locations are great.
Other reviewers suggest the modern flats are council (social) housing) and perhaps they are but they might be private apartments.
If you like 1940s and 1950s British films you might want to seek out this one.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe screening of this movie at the BFI Southbank on September 29, 2010 was introduced by Peggy Cummins.
- Citations
Desk Sgt. Bates: You're not obliged to say anything unless you wish to do so but whatever you say will be taken down in writing and may be given in evidence. Do you wish to say anything?
Prostitute at Police Station: Do I wish to say anything - I certainly do. You know me don't you? You seen me down here plenty of times before, 'aven't you?
Desk Sgt. Bates: Yes, plenty.
Prostitute at Police Station: I've never made any trouble before, 'ave I?
Desk Sgt. Bates: No, I don't think you 'ave.
Prostitute at Police Station: Alright then. Well next time you wanna pinch me, you send one of the boys along, see? I don't mind being knocked off occasionally - that's your job and you've got to do it, but I'm sick and tired of being knocked off by coppers in skirts. It's bad for business! If I'm going to be pinched, I wanna be pinched by a man, understand?
- ConnexionsFeatured in It Came from Hollywood (1982)
Meilleurs choix
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Both Sides of the Law
- Lieux de tournage
- Old Ferry Wharf, Cremorne Rd, Chelsea, Londres, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(crooks drive into)
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 34 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1