Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaUK scientists find a cure for plague but their government, fearing its military-biological potential, keeps the discovery secret until a scientist is duped into giving it to a foreign power.UK scientists find a cure for plague but their government, fearing its military-biological potential, keeps the discovery secret until a scientist is duped into giving it to a foreign power.UK scientists find a cure for plague but their government, fearing its military-biological potential, keeps the discovery secret until a scientist is duped into giving it to a foreign power.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
Avaliações em destaque
This is a film that was made by the Boultings at about the time they were preparing I'm Alright Jack.It contains some pretty odd characters.Virginia Maskell who was engaged to amputee Ian Bannen but is still living with him.Bannen himself playing the amputee who for some reason has to have most things done for him despite the fact that even in the sixties prosthetic limbs were available.There is also the secret service portrayed by Nigel Stock as bumbling but effective.At the time this film was made the country was getting over the shock of the defections to Russia and the errors made by the secret service.Donald Pleasance is effective as the seedy go between.Peter Cushing also stands out as the head of the department,whilst Tony Britton makes the best of a rather thankless role.A very interest and almost unknown film.
A decently made,fairly entertaining attempt to make a mini-budget suspense spy thriller with a very familiar British cast;the supporting players are actually more characterful than leads Tony Britton and Virginia Maskell;Ian Bannen was usually cast in intense roles and he does a fine job here as a tortured and tragic soul disabled by circumstance,and there's reliable support from such British stalwarts as Donald Pleasence,Thorley Walters,Raymond Huntley and Kenneth Griffith.The quirkiest performance though comes from legendary comic genius Spike Milligan as an Irish caretaker;his scenes of comic relief work quite well,though there isn't enough of them.
The limitations of production sometimes work against the film,as does a fairly routine and unremarkable plot,but some neat touches by the Boultings,as well as the above performers,make SUSPECT a perfectly watchable effort.
The limitations of production sometimes work against the film,as does a fairly routine and unremarkable plot,but some neat touches by the Boultings,as well as the above performers,make SUSPECT a perfectly watchable effort.
This little movie shows it origins as a filler for the Boulting Brothers who found themselves with 17 days of studio time on their hands (thanks Kevinolzak's earlier review for that snippet!). I watched it for the cast. Spike Milligan in a very strange role as the janitor/security man and Sam Kydd in a less unusual role as a police/MI5 operative. Think kitchen sink drama meets black and white John Le Carre adaptations meets scientific dilemma. Thorley Walters is the stand-out here as the slightly eccentric MI5 investigator piecing the puzzle together. Oh, and the movie also helps explain why there are fewer women than men in the STEM scientific fields. A period piece but worth an hour and a half of your time. To prepare for it, get in a pot of tea or a couple of bottles of warm and weak beer, some cigarettes or a pipe, and make sure to you wear a cardigan and/or a tweed jacket. Lots of fun if watched in the correct way!
Far less well known or celebrated film from the Boultings but certainly above average. Tony Britton plays the lead, a youngish and naively principled scientist up against a fairly Orwellian authority in "the government", and he's quite good too - he is most remembered for appearing in various cosy family sit-coms in later career.
He is very ably supported by a strong cast- the lovely Virginia Maskell is the object of his affections albeit married to the tragically disarmed Ian Bannen. Peter Cushing, Raymond Huntley, Donald Pleasence and Kenneth Griffiths offer first class support; there is a quirky role for Spike Milligan, who gets the final sign-off scene, but it is Thorley Walters who steals the show as an eccentric, bumbling but persistent security chief. Well worth catching when next aired on TPTV.
He is very ably supported by a strong cast- the lovely Virginia Maskell is the object of his affections albeit married to the tragically disarmed Ian Bannen. Peter Cushing, Raymond Huntley, Donald Pleasence and Kenneth Griffiths offer first class support; there is a quirky role for Spike Milligan, who gets the final sign-off scene, but it is Thorley Walters who steals the show as an eccentric, bumbling but persistent security chief. Well worth catching when next aired on TPTV.
1960's "The Risk" (British title "Suspect") was a lower budgeted effort from Roy and John Boulting, made in 17 days on a wager since they had three weeks of studio time booked and had finished their most recent production ahead of schedule. Leading its distinguished supporting cast is third billed Peter Cushing as Professor Sewell, heading a close knit group of research scientists whose findings on bacteria and germ warfare are ready to be published, but quickly silenced by their concerned government, afraid that enemies could use their findings against humanity. Sewell and his staff are outraged, but it's the less experienced youngsters who prove to be too impatient, endangering the entire project by allowing themselves to become pawns of a war veteran (Ian Bannen) embittered by the loss of both arms. The little known leads, Tony Britton and Virginia Maskell (a tragic suicide in 1968), are easily overshadowed by their veteran co-stars, especially Thorley Walters as security chief Prince, Sam Kydd his number one aide, and Donald Pleasence as the mysterious Bill Brown, who insists he can find a way to publish the report. On such a short shooting schedule that would do Roger Corman proud, it's the experienced players that keep the plot simmering. Between classic turns in "The Flesh and the Fiends" and "The Brides of Dracula," Peter Cushing enjoys a rare change of pace, a bespectacled, older man of reason in gray hair and mustache, tinkering with props such as a pipe and stop watch. His final speech touching upon responsibility to the law is a moving one: "you are young enough to be sure that you are right, I am old enough to be sure of only one thing, that I can be wrong."
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesNot released in the UK until September 1962 when it went out on the ABC circuit as a supporting film to Val Guest's Quebra-Cabeça (1962).
- Erros de gravaçãoTwo location street scenes feature a very-poor mock-up of a British phone-box: light, flimsy and apparently made of wood, at one point it visibly wobbles - and the door-closer has almost no force to it. Quite unlike the heavy rock-solid real thing that needs you to heave on the door to open it.
- ConexõesReferenced in Cena do Crime: O Assassino da Times Square: Murder on 42nd St. (2021)
Principais escolhas
Faça login para avaliar e ver a lista de recomendações personalizadas
- How long is The Risk?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Tempo de duração1 hora 21 minutos
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 1.66 : 1
Contribua para esta página
Sugerir uma alteração ou adicionar conteúdo ausente