IMDb RATING
6.2/10
385
YOUR RATING
An ex-con, released after imprisonment for a jewel theft, swears vengeance on his former accomplices and devises an intricate plan to steal their fortune.An ex-con, released after imprisonment for a jewel theft, swears vengeance on his former accomplices and devises an intricate plan to steal their fortune.An ex-con, released after imprisonment for a jewel theft, swears vengeance on his former accomplices and devises an intricate plan to steal their fortune.
Francis Adams
- Prison Priest
- (uncredited)
André Belhomme
- Larry
- (uncredited)
Leon Bijou
- Jupp
- (uncredited)
Albert Chevalier
- Spearman
- (uncredited)
John Clifford
- Man in Pepper-throwing Sequence
- (uncredited)
Percy Coyte
- Hangman
- (uncredited)
Paul Croft
- Dusty
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
For Dr. Who fans, this film would be an interesting thing to see. While William Hartnell (the first Doctor) made quite a few movies, he didn't star in all that many...and here he is the star.
The film begins with Leo (Hartnell) doing a smash and grab job at a jewelry store. It goes horribly wrong and Leo's fellow gang members run away and leave him to the authorities. It's pretty doubtful they could have done much to help...but Leo is the type to hold a grudge. When he eventually gets out of prison, he seems to have one thing on his mind....revenge against his old mates. Soon they start dying off...and you wonder if Leo will take them all out during the course of this movie. However, some of the gang members are real tough and clever sorts...perhaps they can stop him before it's too late.
If you like film noir, then you'll probably enjoy this. Hartnell plays a real nasty little rat...sort of like a Jimmy Cagney type but much more vicious. It also has a really dandy ending! Well worth seeing...for Who fans and non-Whovians.
The film begins with Leo (Hartnell) doing a smash and grab job at a jewelry store. It goes horribly wrong and Leo's fellow gang members run away and leave him to the authorities. It's pretty doubtful they could have done much to help...but Leo is the type to hold a grudge. When he eventually gets out of prison, he seems to have one thing on his mind....revenge against his old mates. Soon they start dying off...and you wonder if Leo will take them all out during the course of this movie. However, some of the gang members are real tough and clever sorts...perhaps they can stop him before it's too late.
If you like film noir, then you'll probably enjoy this. Hartnell plays a real nasty little rat...sort of like a Jimmy Cagney type but much more vicious. It also has a really dandy ending! Well worth seeing...for Who fans and non-Whovians.
Small-time hood Leo Martin (William Hartnell), fingered by the coppers when his colleagues abandoned him after a botched smash-and-grab, swears revenge when he gets out of the joint. I must admit that I watched this British crime-meller because it starred Hartnell, the 'First Doctor' in the Dr. Who canon, but he is pretty good in a stiff way as the vengeful, amoral con (other than 'gangster honour', his character doesn't have many redeeming qualities). The story is pretty bleak, with the criminal life coming across as seedy and unpleasant rather than dangerous but slightly glamorous, as is common in many American films. Joyce Howard is a standout as Carol, a 'taxi dancer' working for 6p/dance at a sleazy nightclub, who initially befriends Leo and believes his protestations of innocence and good intentions, as are Herbert Lom as the crime boss and Alan Wheatley as his mincing, effete minion. Also worth mentioning is Ivor Barnard as a diminutive but menacing hitman. The melodrama is laid on a bit thick, especially in the first 10 minutes, and film is choppy at times, suffering from poor editing either in the initial production or afterwards when dealing with the censors (an abrupt cut from a pivotal 'torture' scene suggests the latter). The buildup to the climax is good but the ending is a bit flat. All in all, good but not great. Anyone wanting to see a pre-Who Hartnell play a hardcase would be better off watching 'Brighton Rock' (1948), in which he plays Dallow, the second-in-command to psychotic gangster 'Pinkie' Brown (David Attenborough).
This decent British noir is about a petty crook who gets out of prison and is caught between the police looking for a murderer and the crooks who got him put in prison in a smash and grab job. It is a lot grittier than American noir. William Hartnell is very believable as the ex-con and Joyce Howard is fine as the not-too-bright dance hall girl who believes him. American noirs seem to have a sheen of glamor in comparison to this underclass melodrama.
There is a strong homosexual component to the underworld in this movie, with Herbert Lom as an effete foreign crime boss; his chief henchman plays his role as flamboyantly homosexual, just shy of a British comedy. The whole thing looks shot cheaply, which adds to the grime, and the direction and actors don't seem to do full justice to the script, but the net effect is decent. Worth a look.
There is a strong homosexual component to the underworld in this movie, with Herbert Lom as an effete foreign crime boss; his chief henchman plays his role as flamboyantly homosexual, just shy of a British comedy. The whole thing looks shot cheaply, which adds to the grime, and the direction and actors don't seem to do full justice to the script, but the net effect is decent. Worth a look.
If you like your noir unfettered with Hollywood trimmings, then this fare is for you. A jewel robbery goes bad and the man caught takes the fall for the whole gang. William Hartnell is the hood who expects to get some action after he gets out of prison, but he is shunned by his former mates.
Joyce Howard stars as his dance hall girlfriend, who remains loyal to him despite his rather obvious flaws. Herbert Lom plays a crime boss of questionable sexual identity, but his henchman is playing clearly for the other team. The film never explores their relationship.
The production values are minimal, but then again, so is the story line, so it fits nicely. A good piece of noir.
Joyce Howard stars as his dance hall girlfriend, who remains loyal to him despite his rather obvious flaws. Herbert Lom plays a crime boss of questionable sexual identity, but his henchman is playing clearly for the other team. The film never explores their relationship.
The production values are minimal, but then again, so is the story line, so it fits nicely. A good piece of noir.
Right before the final few moments of 1946's "Appointment with Crime," I realized I saw it many, many years ago - the final scene is very striking.
William Hartnell plays Leo Martin, who went along with a robbery scheme and was badly injured and wound up in prison while the other perps went free. When he is released from prison, he plans his revenge.
One of his ex-partners, Loman (Raymond Lovell) runs a dime a dance joint. Leo wants a job from him and subsequently learns that the job, a jewelry store robbery, was actually planned by someone else - Gregory Lang (Herbert Lom), an art dealer.
Leo comes up with a way of framing Loman for the murder of the other partner, and then blackmailing Lang, whose gun was used. He also gives himself a great alibi for the murder. At the time it occurred, he was at the dance club monopolizing the time of Carol (Joyce Howard).
Lom is appropriately classy and slimy at the same time. Hartnell is scarily effective and manages to talk without moving his mouth very much.
I have been working off of a list of noirs and near-noirs - many of them atrocious - and this is a cut above those I've seen.
William Hartnell plays Leo Martin, who went along with a robbery scheme and was badly injured and wound up in prison while the other perps went free. When he is released from prison, he plans his revenge.
One of his ex-partners, Loman (Raymond Lovell) runs a dime a dance joint. Leo wants a job from him and subsequently learns that the job, a jewelry store robbery, was actually planned by someone else - Gregory Lang (Herbert Lom), an art dealer.
Leo comes up with a way of framing Loman for the murder of the other partner, and then blackmailing Lang, whose gun was used. He also gives himself a great alibi for the murder. At the time it occurred, he was at the dance club monopolizing the time of Carol (Joyce Howard).
Lom is appropriately classy and slimy at the same time. Hartnell is scarily effective and manages to talk without moving his mouth very much.
I have been working off of a list of noirs and near-noirs - many of them atrocious - and this is a cut above those I've seen.
Did you know
- TriviaIn 1958, Robert Beatty was a regular on Dial 999 (1958) in which he played Inspector Mike Maguire, a Canadian police officer attached to Scotland Yard, the same as in this film. Beatty in reality is indeed Canadian.
- GoofsAfter the scene where Leo is about to have his wrists crushed by a printing press, the film fades to the next scene where he is in Lang's living room, but inexplicably he is still in possession of the luggage ticket whose whereabouts had been the object of the presumed torture.
- Quotes
[last lines]
Leo Martin: [screaming in pain with both his wrists caught between a window] My wrists! My wrists! My wrists! My... wrists.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Appointment with Crime
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 30m(90 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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