A wrongly convicted murderer escapes prison to find the real killer.A wrongly convicted murderer escapes prison to find the real killer.A wrongly convicted murderer escapes prison to find the real killer.
Geoffrey Alexander
- Plainclothesman
- (as Geoffrey Murphy)
Featured reviews
Murderer Kieron Moore escapes from prison. He's headed to London for.... revenge? His ex-wife, Lois Maxwell, now married to Bill Travers, and hiding under a different name and profession, thinks he is coming for her. In reality, he's looking for the man who committed the murder. The police are closing in on Moore, but Paul Henreid, lawyer, lover and bon vivant, has been asked to look into the matter by a friend, and is doing so.
It sounds like an unlikely role for Henreid, doesn't it? He pulls it off here, and although the solution to this mystery is poorly prefigured, it's a pretty good movie of pretty people in pretty clothes -- except for Moore -- it works as an enormous series of red herrings to drag across the trail. That may be the point of this movie, as a pasquinade of murder mysteries.
It sounds like an unlikely role for Henreid, doesn't it? He pulls it off here, and although the solution to this mystery is poorly prefigured, it's a pretty good movie of pretty people in pretty clothes -- except for Moore -- it works as an enormous series of red herrings to drag across the trail. That may be the point of this movie, as a pasquinade of murder mysteries.
The next film watched for the "House of Hammer" podcast is 1953's "Mantrap", alternately titled both "Woman In Hiding" and "Man In Hiding" depending on where and when you come across it.
Thelma (Lois Maxwell) is disturbed to learn that her husband, Speight (Kieron Moore) has escaped from Prison, where he was sentenced for murder. In the subsequent years, Thelma had established a new life for herself and has remarried to Victor Tasman (Bill Travers). There are serious questions though about whether Speight committed the murder and one of his friends asks Hugo Bishop (Paul Henreid) to find him before the police do.
A reasonably solid if somewhat unspectacular whodunnit. It's apparent pretty early that that despite her fear, Speight is not actually hunting his ex-wife and so that only really leaves one other option. Performances are OK. Paul Henreid is not perhaps a typical leading man, but his spark with his secretary/fiancé, played by Kay Kendall, is quite good. Hammer regular Anthony Forwood reappears as yet another upper-class cad, but again, he's got that role down.
Visually and aurally, the film is OK, if not perhaps the height of what we've seen from Hammer (This may be linked though to me seeing a Youtube version that appears to have been recorded from the television. The story is fine, but, as is often the case with Hammer films, the ending is not such more stunted as abrupt. It's also a little bit to small for what it needs to be. In hinges on one character seeing another across a dancefloor, but the room doesn't seem big enough for them not to have noticed each other previously.
It was alright, perhaps a little more invention wouldn't have gone amiss, and I doubt I'm ever going to watch it again.
Thelma (Lois Maxwell) is disturbed to learn that her husband, Speight (Kieron Moore) has escaped from Prison, where he was sentenced for murder. In the subsequent years, Thelma had established a new life for herself and has remarried to Victor Tasman (Bill Travers). There are serious questions though about whether Speight committed the murder and one of his friends asks Hugo Bishop (Paul Henreid) to find him before the police do.
A reasonably solid if somewhat unspectacular whodunnit. It's apparent pretty early that that despite her fear, Speight is not actually hunting his ex-wife and so that only really leaves one other option. Performances are OK. Paul Henreid is not perhaps a typical leading man, but his spark with his secretary/fiancé, played by Kay Kendall, is quite good. Hammer regular Anthony Forwood reappears as yet another upper-class cad, but again, he's got that role down.
Visually and aurally, the film is OK, if not perhaps the height of what we've seen from Hammer (This may be linked though to me seeing a Youtube version that appears to have been recorded from the television. The story is fine, but, as is often the case with Hammer films, the ending is not such more stunted as abrupt. It's also a little bit to small for what it needs to be. In hinges on one character seeing another across a dancefloor, but the room doesn't seem big enough for them not to have noticed each other previously.
It was alright, perhaps a little more invention wouldn't have gone amiss, and I doubt I'm ever going to watch it again.
British Hammer mystery starring Paul Henreid, Lous Maxwell, Kieron Moore, and Kay Kendall.
A prisoner named Speight (Moore), found guilty of murder, escapes and heads for London. His wife (Maxwell, Miss Moneypenny of the James Bond films), who has changed her name and is involved with another man, fears he is looking for her.
A friend of Speight's asks a lawyer, Bishop (Henreid) to help find him. He does - Speight claims he's innocent and is looking for the real killer. He knows what the man looks like and is determined to clear his name.
Okay movie - several have commented on how cheerful Henreid is in this film. I guess thinking over his past performances, it is a different kind of role. His fiancé is portrayed by the lovely Kay Kendall, who died a few years later from leukemia.
I can't say this film held my interest except for the people in it. For instance, this was Barbara Shelley's first film.
The small part of Rex was played by handsome Anthony Forwood. He was married to Glynis Johns with whom he had a son, and later became Dirk Bogarde's life partner and manager. He died an agonizing death, so traumatic for Bogarde that he became an outspoken supporter of assisted suicide.
A prisoner named Speight (Moore), found guilty of murder, escapes and heads for London. His wife (Maxwell, Miss Moneypenny of the James Bond films), who has changed her name and is involved with another man, fears he is looking for her.
A friend of Speight's asks a lawyer, Bishop (Henreid) to help find him. He does - Speight claims he's innocent and is looking for the real killer. He knows what the man looks like and is determined to clear his name.
Okay movie - several have commented on how cheerful Henreid is in this film. I guess thinking over his past performances, it is a different kind of role. His fiancé is portrayed by the lovely Kay Kendall, who died a few years later from leukemia.
I can't say this film held my interest except for the people in it. For instance, this was Barbara Shelley's first film.
The small part of Rex was played by handsome Anthony Forwood. He was married to Glynis Johns with whom he had a son, and later became Dirk Bogarde's life partner and manager. He died an agonizing death, so traumatic for Bogarde that he became an outspoken supporter of assisted suicide.
AKA..."Woman in Hiding"
A Few Years Before Hammer Studios Changed the Face and Tone of Horror Movies,
the Famous British Studio Dabbled in Film-Noir and Police Procedurals.
Notice the Odd Board Game that the Police Use to Move Squad Cars Around.
A Forced, Borderline Ridiculous Attempt to Elevate Law Enforcement to Omnipresence.
This Type of Over-Kill Attempt to Worship Post-War Law Enforcement Diluted Many a Film-Noir in the 1950's.
Paul Henreid's Over-the-Top Strange, Giddy Performance as a Lawyer Interested in Human Behavior, Almost Sinks this Average Who-Done-It.
Lois Maxwell (James Bond's Miss Moneypenny) is Fantastic to Look-At and Gives a Good Performance as a Worried, Nervous Wife of an Escaped Murderer.
The Other Females Mary Laura Wood and Kay Kendall also Add Some Eye-Candy to the Pedestrian Movie.
Plenty of On-Location Footage Around London Add Gravitas.
But the Male Performers are All Stiff and Uninteresting, and Along with Henreid's Breezy Antics do Nothing to Enhance the Intrigue.
Directed by Legendary Horror Director Terence Fisher.
A Good Effort by the Studio with a Decent Budget with an Outdoor Gritty Look.
But an Average Film Overall.
If it's a Hammer Movie, it's Worth a Watch.
A Few Years Before Hammer Studios Changed the Face and Tone of Horror Movies,
the Famous British Studio Dabbled in Film-Noir and Police Procedurals.
Notice the Odd Board Game that the Police Use to Move Squad Cars Around.
A Forced, Borderline Ridiculous Attempt to Elevate Law Enforcement to Omnipresence.
This Type of Over-Kill Attempt to Worship Post-War Law Enforcement Diluted Many a Film-Noir in the 1950's.
Paul Henreid's Over-the-Top Strange, Giddy Performance as a Lawyer Interested in Human Behavior, Almost Sinks this Average Who-Done-It.
Lois Maxwell (James Bond's Miss Moneypenny) is Fantastic to Look-At and Gives a Good Performance as a Worried, Nervous Wife of an Escaped Murderer.
The Other Females Mary Laura Wood and Kay Kendall also Add Some Eye-Candy to the Pedestrian Movie.
Plenty of On-Location Footage Around London Add Gravitas.
But the Male Performers are All Stiff and Uninteresting, and Along with Henreid's Breezy Antics do Nothing to Enhance the Intrigue.
Directed by Legendary Horror Director Terence Fisher.
A Good Effort by the Studio with a Decent Budget with an Outdoor Gritty Look.
But an Average Film Overall.
If it's a Hammer Movie, it's Worth a Watch.
Paul Henried is uncharacteristically jaunty in this early Hammer thriller set in a postwar London of bombsites, trenchcoats and impossibly glamorous females. Before she found her niche as Miss Moneypenny Lois Maxwell plays a damsel in distress, the role of sexy secretary instead going to an up and coming young Kay Kendall.
Did you know
- TriviaThis was Barbara Shelley's first film.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Hammer: The Studio That Dripped Blood! (1987)
- SoundtracksA Pair of Sparkling Eyes
(uncredited)
from "The Gondoliers"
Music by Arthur Sullivan
Arranged by Eric Rogers
- How long is Man in Hiding?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime1 hour 13 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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