Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaGerald Coates' horse wins Grand National. His wife returns drunk, they argue, she dies accidentally. Coates claims she never returned. Police find train ticket, suspect him. As arrest looms,... Ler tudoGerald Coates' horse wins Grand National. His wife returns drunk, they argue, she dies accidentally. Coates claims she never returned. Police find train ticket, suspect him. As arrest looms, he gets unexpected help from unknown source.Gerald Coates' horse wins Grand National. His wife returns drunk, they argue, she dies accidentally. Coates claims she never returned. Police find train ticket, suspect him. As arrest looms, he gets unexpected help from unknown source.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Chandler
- (as Richard Grayden)
Avaliações em destaque
Patrick plays Gerald Coates, a wealthy horse breeder whose horse wins the Grand National. His wife Babs (Lister) is an unhappy drunk. Her driver's license has been revoked, but after a row with a drunken friend in Liverpool, she drives home in bad weather. Her husband is furious. They quarrel; she falls and dies.
Her body is found in the car in Liverpool. The police see that the car drove 44 miles - meaning to them that she drove 22 miles home from Liverpool. Gerald denies she ever returned.
Good movie as Gerald tries to have savior faire in the face of evidence - her shoes, her compact from her evening bag found in the couch, and, most devastating, a train ticket from the husband's macintosh pocket showing he returned from Liverpool that night despite saying he was home.
Nice twist at the end. Entertaining.
This thriller from Nettlefold Studios is slightly different. Racehorse trainer Gerald Coates (played by the always excellent Nigel Patrick) doesn't intend to kill his drunken, mean-spirited wife Babs (Moira Lister). As an accident, therefore, there is no careful preparation and cool-headed problem-solving of the kind Ray Milland or Jack Cassidy had to deal with. In truth, this decision makes the story less dramatic, but it also makes for an interesting change of pace, and ensures the protagonist has our sympathy. It could even be argued that he is the true victim of the piece as the viewers will surely wish they could kill Babs themselves.
The film was previously a radio serial on the BBC and, originally, a stage play by Dorothy and Campbell Christie. Its stage-bound origins are certainly obvious, as most of the action takes place in one large room at the Coates' country estate. Indeed, many such stories, in my experience, do originate on stage. (There seems to be something about watching people die at a very close distance that engages theatre audiences like little else.) There are a few scattered instances in which we go beyond those walls - we visit Aintree racecourse, for instance, there's an all-too-brief moment when Coates tries to evade the police on horseback, and a dreamily atmospheric flashback near the end.
The flashback, in particular, is required as, for most of the film, we are not sure just what has become of the dead wife. Indeed, it appears for a time as though she is still alive, as that is initially what Coates leads everyone to believe.
Things do not seem any clearer when Babs is revealed to have died in nearby Liverpool. Coates tries to keep a diligent detective - played by the legendary Sir Michael Hordern - from discovering that Babs had, in fact, returned to the house before her death.
It is a shame that Nigel Patrick didn't get more starring roles as he was clearly a very dependable actor. He was often cast as suave gentlemen, but I also caught him as a comically hyperactive spiv in 1948's tonally inconsistent Noose (avoid it). Also magnificent was Colin Gordon, a regular face on film and later television, who appears here in an unexpectedly key role. A neat bit of business, involving the two, wraps everything up neatly, making Grand National Night a pleasant and undemanding B-film.
Even with that, there are a few surprises in this movie. It's been opened up from a stage play, and a good job of it has been done. Even so, the incredibly posh names, like Colin Gordon's upper-class twit "Babs Darling" and Patrick's sympathetic sister-in-law, "Pinkie Collins", portrayed by Betty Ann Davies, clutter the screen. With Noel Purcell and Gibbs McLaughlin.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesAccording to the Ordnance Survey map on which Inspector Ayling (Sir Michael Hordern) traces the radius within which the car could have travelled, the fictitious village of Chillington was actually Culcheth, midway between Warrington and Leigh in Lancashire.
- Erros de gravaçãoThe story is set in and around Liverpool yet there is not one trace of a Liverpool accent anywhere in the film.
- Citações
[Babs Coates comes home blind drunk and demands to take out a horse for a ride. The only one available is a heavily pregnant mare - and it doesn't even belong to the stables. But Babs insists. She rides it hard, hitting it with a whip, and falls off as she tries to jump a hedge]
Sgt. Gibson: Are you hurt?
Babs Coates: I don't think so.
Sgt. Gibson: [reprovingly] Well you *ought* to be!
Principais escolhas
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- Wicked Wife
- Locações de filme
- Barkham Square, Barkham Street, Barkham, Wokingham, Berkshire, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(Gerald and Babs Coates' house)
- Empresa de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração1 hora 20 minutos
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1