15 recensioni
- allenrogerj
- 11 ago 2008
- Permalink
This is a hidden gem of film noir. Not the usual fare of hard-nosed gangsters plugging each other with lead, but a much simpler story of a decent man caught up in the understandable lure of easy money. Robert Newton (Treasure Island) plays a widowed harbor bridge man who lives alone with his adolescent daughter in simple surroundings. He witnesses a murder and tries to rescue the victim. Instead, he dredges up a valise with 5000 pounds; quite a sum in those days. From here there are many unforseen complications, including a very pleasant romance with a circus performer (Simone Simon, who was the original Cat Woman). That would have been more than enough complications for any man, but there are many other forces at play here. The murderer, the police, and a man's conscience. It is interesting to note which of these is the most prominent. Very good viewing.
- arthur_tafero
- 2 ago 2022
- Permalink
For some reason this film has been unseen for more than 30years.Unshown on TV,unreleased on vhs or DVD.I saw it over 30years ago at the BFI South bank.It is a great film,finally now viewable on the BFI player.Great performance from a restrained Robert Newton,atmospheric photography and taut direction.This film deserves a DVD release so that we can watch it whenever we like,not have to wait whilst it is stuck in a vault.
- malcolmgsw
- 1 feb 2018
- Permalink
Railway sigmalman Robert Newton (Bert) witnesses a murder one night whilst at his post. He sees William Hartnell (Jim) push another man to his death into a river. This man was carrying a suitcase and Newton recovers the suitcase to find it full of cash - £5,000 in total. What does Newton do next?
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!
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!
A real downer starring Robert Newton, Simone Simon, Marcel Dalio, and Margaret Barton.
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.
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.
- hwg1957-102-265704
- 31 mar 2021
- Permalink
Robert Newton has been a railroad night signalman, stuck in a box for eight hours a night for twenty years. His wife died three years ago, and he's trying to raise their daughter, Margaret Barton. One night he sees two men get into a fight in the yards, and one of them goes down. Both disappear, but he recovers the suitcase they were fighting over. There are five thousand pounds in small bills in it. He takes it home, determined to take it to the police, but on his way, there are too many temptations: a five-pound smoking pipe.... well, easy enough to stick with his old one, but there are other temptations.
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.
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.
- writers_reign
- 16 ago 2008
- Permalink
This is a typical bleak Georges Simenon almost documentary and very "noir" story of very simple and normal people that are cruelly played out by destiny to fatal ordeals. It's a very unusual and different kind of role for Robert Newton, who manages this difficult part with outstanding excellence. Simone Siomon is also remarkably good, while the ruffian William Hartnell brings all the trouble and gets the worst of it. The story is very reminding of "The Man who Watched Trains Go By", and Robert Newton's character is closely related with Claude Rains' in the later film (1952), that was in colour, but this is all in very black and white, and more in black and more dark than light. What embellishes the story is the beautiful music by Mischa Spoliansky, an oasis of comfort in the awful predicaments, and Margaret Barton as the daughter, the only sunshine in the film, but she never stops shining. The story and film is sad but somehow anyway filled with poetry, for the main feeling of the film is a deep human compassion with unwilling victims of the misfortunes of destiny.
- mark.waltz
- 17 dic 2020
- Permalink
- happytrigger-64-390517
- 25 mar 2019
- Permalink
Released in 1947 it was overshadowed by Brighton Rock of course.
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.
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.
- czvns-22691
- 8 set 2023
- Permalink
If you've seen the 1943 French film "The Man From London" you do not need to see this one as well, and vice versa. There are some differences between the two films, but they do have one thing in common: short-story material (admittedly a strong story) is padded out to feature length (in this case 102 minutes, which is about 62 minutes longer than it should have been). Robert Newton seems miscast, and Simone Simon's role is largely redundant; the French police inspector is - in both films - very tiresome, taking 5 minutes each time to say a simple sentence. Young Betty (Margaret Barton) is the one bright spot of this film. ** out of 4.
- gridoon2025
- 21 lug 2022
- Permalink
When signalman "Bert" (Robert Newton) sees some suspicious activity in the harbour one night he investigates only to find a corpse and a suitcase. On returning to his box to call the authorities, he notices that the case contains rather a large quantity of banknotes. Around £5,000! Now he is single-handedly trying to raise his daughter "Betty" (Margaret Barton) and has a few other issues to contend with, so he decides to keep the windfall and keep his head down. That might have seemed a good plan at the time, but soon people begin to spot the signs of his new found wealth and with police from both sides of the Channel as well as the original owners of the loot on his trail, things start to get distinctly dicey for him. On the plus side, though, he has made a new friend. "Camelia" (Simone Simon) is the only person in whom he's confided, but is she trustworthy? Is anyone? This features a solid cast of regulars like Irene Handl, Edward Rigby and the always reliable Kathleen Harrison as it quite menacingly develops into a story illustrating the dangers of following the green-eyed monster, however well intentioned at the start one may be, and at just how it can change people. Newton is very much in his element - he always did do the frantic and panicky characters well, and he does illicit a degree of sympathy as things close in on him. It packs quite a lot into ninety minutes, pretty much hits the ground running and is well worth a watch.
- CinemaSerf
- 3 dic 2024
- Permalink
"Temptation harbor" is actually the remake of Henri Decoin's " l'homme de Londres" (1943) one of the twenty or so movies produced by the German La Continentale in the French occupations days.
The American screenplay ,based on Georges Simenon 's book ,has undergone some changes : the hero is a widower whereas in the French movie he had a whole family ; Camelia was a prostitute (with a big heart) whereas she's a "mermaid" at the fair in Lance Comfort's work.
Gone are religion, the colleague in the signal box who mentioned the Bible and the difficulties for man to stay on the straight and narrow .
But the gist of the movie is the same ;both heroes ,with their man-next-door look (Robert Newton is an ideal successor to Fernand Ledoux ) , are haunted by the lure of gain but smitten with remorse ; if religion is absent in Comfort's effort, one attends "a tempest in a skull" a la Victor Hugo : the frames of mind in voice over ,and Robert Newton's face reflect an unbearable feeling of guit.
The character of Camelia was thoroughly rewritten and developed ; one should note that they reverse the countries : the action which took place in France in Simenon 's book and in the first movie is now situated in England: and Camelia is played by French actress Simone Simon who had already two masterpieces under her belt ("Renoir's "la bête humaine" and Tourneur's "cat people") , her character is French although she appears as a stateless person ,not really a femme fatale ,who dreams of a little home in her native land .
Decoin 's movie focused on the atmosphere ;Comfort's effort is more action with a good sense of rhythm and scenes full of contrasts (the opening scene is the fair ,and the hero's daughter and his new love get along very well (not the usual jealous cliché)) ; the scene in the shack by the sea where only the lighter shows the face is even superior to Decoin's .
Both Decoin's and Comfort's version sufficed ,although Bela Tarr's 3rd adaptation turned it into highbrow stuff in 2008.
The American screenplay ,based on Georges Simenon 's book ,has undergone some changes : the hero is a widower whereas in the French movie he had a whole family ; Camelia was a prostitute (with a big heart) whereas she's a "mermaid" at the fair in Lance Comfort's work.
Gone are religion, the colleague in the signal box who mentioned the Bible and the difficulties for man to stay on the straight and narrow .
But the gist of the movie is the same ;both heroes ,with their man-next-door look (Robert Newton is an ideal successor to Fernand Ledoux ) , are haunted by the lure of gain but smitten with remorse ; if religion is absent in Comfort's effort, one attends "a tempest in a skull" a la Victor Hugo : the frames of mind in voice over ,and Robert Newton's face reflect an unbearable feeling of guit.
The character of Camelia was thoroughly rewritten and developed ; one should note that they reverse the countries : the action which took place in France in Simenon 's book and in the first movie is now situated in England: and Camelia is played by French actress Simone Simon who had already two masterpieces under her belt ("Renoir's "la bête humaine" and Tourneur's "cat people") , her character is French although she appears as a stateless person ,not really a femme fatale ,who dreams of a little home in her native land .
Decoin 's movie focused on the atmosphere ;Comfort's effort is more action with a good sense of rhythm and scenes full of contrasts (the opening scene is the fair ,and the hero's daughter and his new love get along very well (not the usual jealous cliché)) ; the scene in the shack by the sea where only the lighter shows the face is even superior to Decoin's .
Both Decoin's and Comfort's version sufficed ,although Bela Tarr's 3rd adaptation turned it into highbrow stuff in 2008.
- ulicknormanowen
- 12 feb 2022
- Permalink