A secret jet aircraft capable of traveling three times the speed of sound is being developed by a group of scientists secretly. On the day of the test flight, one of the scientists dies in a... Read allA secret jet aircraft capable of traveling three times the speed of sound is being developed by a group of scientists secretly. On the day of the test flight, one of the scientists dies in a mysterious accident, and there are many arguments concerning the flight itself; some thin... Read allA secret jet aircraft capable of traveling three times the speed of sound is being developed by a group of scientists secretly. On the day of the test flight, one of the scientists dies in a mysterious accident, and there are many arguments concerning the flight itself; some think it should be ground-controlled while Heathley (James Donald) wants it to be a manned fli... Read all
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- Dr. Ferguson
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- Myrna
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Featured reviews
As the battle for control of the project rages, the film creates some love interest, as Phyllis Calvert struggles to maintain her loyalty to her obsessed scientist husband.
But the highlight of this film must be the special effects and sound of the supersonic aircraft. They look a bit lame now, but in the 1950's this would have been one of the ultimate hi-tech films.
The Cold War in its infancy, THE NET already has Noel Willman as a sly and ruthless villain, the ever reliable James Donald as the scientist putting his life (and marriage) at risk, and the lovely Phyllis Calvert as Donald's loving wife who has the briefest of affairs with Herbet Lom, who plays Dr Axel Leon, the man supposed to control the M7 aircraft from the military base, and so ensure that Donald stays alive.
Curiosity: Herbert Lom, who would rise to fame as the bungling and vindictive police inspector in several PINK PANTHER films in the late 1960s and during the 1970s, has in the cast the closest to a name sake: Herbert Lomas playing the part of George Jackson.
Pretty Pavlow and Lomas are supposed to be in love but, unlike Calvert and Lom, they never kiss on screen, and you end up wondering whether the film or the plot needed them at all.
Photography is so-so (some of the model shots are quite rudimentary), the acting not exactly memorable (villain Willman steals the show), and the script by William Fairchild certainly has holes. One detail I could not work out: why is this film called THE NET? Spy net? The net provided by ground control? That "net of a fossilized scientist" keeping him from his wife (who just turns up in the high secretive and sensitive control room and even takes over communication with the aircraft, as if that could ever happen) just does not convince me one bit.
In the end, it is a somewhat interesting foray into post WWII aviation, and how the trials and errors of the time paved the way for the much safer flying we have today.
But like most of Asquith's films, it's really a psychological delving and charting this time into the weird issue of science as an obsession bordering on madness. Prof. Michael Heathley (James Donald) lives only for his airplane and neglects his charming beautiful wife Phyllis Calvert, always a joy on the screen. He is evidently at risk as he is constantly overworking and prone to take risks - his only fear is to get stuck in "the net of a fossilized scientist", and much of the film is symbolically behind barbed wire. In his team are Robert Beatty as a security major and Herbert Lom admiring his wife and actually going a bit far flirting with her, but you excuse him since she is neglected and so irresistible. Another cheerful doctor (Noel Willman) is also with them, but you are alarmed from the start by his demeanour, and he will surprise you. The music adroitly illustrates the border line element in the workshop, and there is some spying business going on as well.
There are some nerve-racking flying sequences, just like in "The Sound Barrier", but David Lean's film sticks more to the ground and reality, while here you are taken for a ride beyond consciousness bordering almost on science fiction. It's a thriller, and as the tension increases at constantly higher gear as the film climaxes, you will not able to relax until after the very last minute.
Did you know
- GoofsWhen Seagram is alerting the emergency crew on the last morning, he removes the phone from his mouth but keeps talking as he puts it down,
- Quotes
Brian Jackson: I heard what you were saying. Are you really going to take her up?
Prof. Michael Heathley: Yes.
Brian Jackson: Michael, you can't do it!
Prof. Michael Heathley: Why? Because Carrington's dead?
Brian Jackson: Well - yes.
Prof. Michael Heathley: Now look Brian, if he was wrong while he was alive, just being dead won't make him right.
- ConnectionsReferenced in La Beauté des bas-fonds (1958)
Details
- Runtime1 hour 26 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1