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The House Across the Lake

  • 1954
  • Approved
  • 1h 8m
IMDb RATING
6.0/10
897
YOUR RATING
Hillary Brooke, Paul Carpenter, Sidney James, Alex Nicol, and Susan Stephen in The House Across the Lake (1954)
Heat Wave: Fast Blondes And Slow Gin
Play clip1:28
Watch Heat Wave: Fast Blondes And Slow Gin
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71 Photos
Film NoirCrimeDrama

An American writer living in England gets entangled in a scheme by a beautiful blonde to murder her rich husband.An American writer living in England gets entangled in a scheme by a beautiful blonde to murder her rich husband.An American writer living in England gets entangled in a scheme by a beautiful blonde to murder her rich husband.

  • Director
    • Ken Hughes
  • Writer
    • Ken Hughes
  • Stars
    • Alex Nicol
    • Hillary Brooke
    • Sidney James
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.0/10
    897
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ken Hughes
    • Writer
      • Ken Hughes
    • Stars
      • Alex Nicol
      • Hillary Brooke
      • Sidney James
    • 31User reviews
    • 16Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Heat Wave: Fast Blondes And Slow Gin
    Clip 1:28
    Heat Wave: Fast Blondes And Slow Gin

    Photos71

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    Top cast34

    Edit
    Alex Nicol
    Alex Nicol
    • Mark Kendrick
    Hillary Brooke
    Hillary Brooke
    • Carol Forrest
    Sidney James
    Sidney James
    • Beverly Forrest
    Susan Stephen
    Susan Stephen
    • Andrea Forrest
    Paul Carpenter
    • Vincent Gordon
    Alan Wheatley
    Alan Wheatley
    • Inspector MacLennan
    Peter Illing
    Peter Illing
    • Harry Stevens
    Gordon McLeod
    • Doctor Emery
    Joan Hickson
    Joan Hickson
    • Mrs. Hardcastle
    John Sharp
    John Sharp
    • Mr. Hardcastle
    Hugh Dempster
    • Frank
    Monti DeLyle
    • Head Waiter
    • (as Monti de Lyle)
    Christine Adrian
    • Receptionist
    • (uncredited)
    Jack Armstrong
    • Party Guest
    • (uncredited)
    William Baskiville
    • Party Guest
    • (uncredited)
    Ernest Blyth
    • Editor
    • (uncredited)
    Harry Brunning
    • Railway Porter
    • (uncredited)
    Dan Cressey
    • Party Guest
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Ken Hughes
    • Writer
      • Ken Hughes
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews31

    6.0897
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    Featured reviews

    8django-1

    British "Double Indemnity"-style mystery, w/ two US leads

    Released in the US by Lippert as "Heat Wave", The House Across The Lake (actually a more accurate title, although Heat Wave suggests some of Hillary Brooke's smoldering sensuality!) is yet another film owing a debt to both Double Indemnity and The Postman Always Rings Twice. American Alex Nicol stars as a heavy-drinking writer who lives across the lake from Hillary Brooke, a scheming Black Widow temptress who teases various men she meets while being married to a wealthy but distant husband (yes, all the cliches are here, but they play well!). Needless to say, Nicol begins a friendship with the husband while falling for the ravishing Ms. Brooke, and any lover of noir thrillers can probably predict the way the film develops. Still, it is well-played by the leads and by the British supporting cast, and Mr. Nicol convincingly portrays a man beaten-down by life, who is brought to the point where he has nothing to lose. I won't give away the ending, but it seems somewhat of a surprise while it is happening, which is what a good mystery should do, even if it is constructed from well-known plot elements of the genre. If you like post-war B&W noir-tinged mysteries of this type, it's a good way to spend 85 minutes on a rainy day--and another opportunity to re-acquaint yourselves with the two underrated American stars, Alex Nicol and Hillary Brooke (fans of Ms. Brooke should check out the early 50s gem CONFIDENCE GIRL, co-starring Tom Conway, for a real Hillary Brooke tour-de-force).
    7FilmFlaneur

    A House worth a visit

    In 1950, American producer Robert Lippert formed a business alliance with Hammer studios. Under the agreement, Lippert would provide American acting talent - frequently shop-worn stars or just supporting actors who fancied a profitable trip out of the country - while Hammer would supply the rest of the cast and the production facilities. Together they would split the profits. Famous for his concern with the bottom line, Lippert produced over 140 films between 1946 and 1955, characteristically genre pieces such as I Shot Jesse James or Rocketship XM. For the British deal, most of the films were noir-ish thrillers - and include this title.

    Sidney James, a regular in this run of productions, appears in House Across The Lake. He plays successfully against type for once, as a millionaire in possession of a straying wife. Directed by Ken Hughes from his own novel, and who a year later also directed another highlight of James' career in Joe Macbeth (1955), as well as later Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (1968) this taut, entirely successful noir thriller is one of the highlights of the Lippert-Hammer noir series (another is The Glass Cage - both available on DVD). A down-and-out writer (Alex Nichol) is invited across the lake to a rich household where he is naturally soon ensnared by a cunning fatale, leading to a waterborne death and inevitable double cross. Although the lure of sex is not quite as explicit as in The Flanagan Boy, which also appears as part of the Hammer series now reissued, House Across The Lake still manages to suggest perfectly satisfactorily the moral quagmire into which the urges of men lead them as well as an effective noir universe, which includes an extended flashback and, that archetypal device, the rueful voice-over. Recommended.
    6trimmerb1234

    Lady from Shanghai only it ain't just the water that's fresh.

    Surprisingly good for a budget Hammer film. Lacking the tantalising gorgeousness of Rita Hayworth or the star-power of Orson Welles and Everett Sloane in Lady from Shanghai the similarly water-borne and much more likely inspiration, the leads do well and the director/screenwriter keeps things nicely atmospheric. The plot twists are effective. But overall the plot lacks the complexity, novelty and power of Lady from Shanghai and the ending is sudden and perfunctory. And ungallant though it might be to say so, the film's femme fatale it has to be said is mature to the point of being a femme mildly injurious but certainly is not lacking in the dramatic stakes.

    A 6.5 Seen on Talking Pictures TV
    7hitchcockthelegend

    Carol's in love with Carol!

    The House Across the Lake (AKA: Heat Wave) is directed by Ken Hughes and he also adapts the screenplay from his own novel High Wray. It stars Alex Nicol, Hillary Brooke, Sid James, Susan Stephen and Paul Carpenter. Music is by Ivor Slaney and cinematography by Walter J. Harvey.

    American novelist Mark Kendrick (Nicol) is living in England and trying to finish his latest novel. When he is invited for drinks at the house across the lake, Mark becomes entangled in the web of a beautiful blonde...

    OK! This plot is hardly new and film noir boasts some truly excellent pictures where a man is duped into a downward spiral by a femme fatale vixen. In that respect, this Hammer Film Production can't compete, either in production value or quality of narrative, yet this is still worthy of inspection by the film noir faithful.

    Nicol's (looking like a poor man's Sterling Hayden) Mark Kendrick and Brooke's Carol Forrest are classic noir characters, he tells us his weakness is women, his constant narration sombre and hapless, she's an icy cold bitch of considerable sting. And with Sid James moping around forlornly as the rich husband who is ill of health and broken of heart, the characterisations are vibrant and performed to a good standard to draw us into the play.

    The air is ripe with pungent pessimism, we know from the off that Mark is in trouble, and sure enough the tale contains treachery, death and moral murkiness. Unfortunately the visuals don't quite match the mood of plotting. The lakeside shots are well done, and Kendrick's cottage with the venetian blinds briefly offer up some promise of noirish disharmony, but mostly the picture is filmed in standard black and white and a trick is missed to elevate the piece to better heights.

    Visual missed chances aside, this is a good low budget Brit noir that gets in and does the job well. 7/10
    6bmacv

    British trappings can't disguise all-American deadly triangle

    Heat Wave is the American reissue title of a pretty fair British suspense drama, The House Across The Lake. It retraces the eternal noir triangle (adding English angles): Rich but rough-hewn older husband (Sidney James); duplicitous blonde trophy wife (Hillary Brooke); and the chump (Alex Nicol). There's also the optional element of the jealous daughter by the first wife (Susan Stephen), but she doesn't bring much to the tea party.

    Nicol is a pulp novelist who's taken a cottage in the lake country where he sweats, drinks but doesn't make much progress on the page rolled in his typewriter. One night he gets a call from party-central across the water, a posh house called High Wray (the movie is directed by Ken Hughes from his novel of that name). Their launch is down – could Nicol pick up some guests waiting at the club and ferry them up to the house?

    He obliges, gets invited in for a thank-you drink, and meets Brooke, the bored, flirtatious wife; her paramour of the moment, pianist Paul Carpenter (she has a weakness for impoverished artistic types); and, later, the daughter. There are `scenes.' Hack writer or no, Nicol can't have read much James M. Cain or he'd be off to his typewriter in a flash, if not all the way back to the States.

    James has a bum ticker and plans to write Brooke out of the will, but inevitably the inevitable happens: James, Brooke and Nicol go out on a fishing expedition, a heavy fog enshrouds them, there's an `accident.' (Brooke even sports Stanwyck-in-the-supermarket cheaters at the coroner's inquest.) But a police inspector (Alan Wheatley) takes an undue interest in the case....

    Despite a score which quotes Debussy's Le Mer until seasickness ensues, the movie has an American feel to it (due in large part to Americans Nicol and Brooke in the leads, though Brooke's cucumber-sandwich accent would fool Henry Higgins). Its major shortcoming is an abrupt ending which leaves a little too much to be inferred, in an understated British way. Best reason for watching is Brooke, who made her mark in some Sherlock Holmes movies and against Brenda Marshall in Strange Impersonation but never got the parts her talents deserved. Heat Wave is an opportunity to watch what she could do.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Certain scenes must have been cut, as some prominently listed cast members (John Sharp, Joan Hickson, Monti de Lyle) are barely visible in the finished film.
    • Goofs
      Despite being set in the Lake District in England Carol drives a left hand drive car on the right side of the road. In England cards drive on the left and cars are right-hand drive.
    • Quotes

      Beverly Forrest: Carol's in love with Carol.

    • Connections
      Featured in The House across the Thames (2022)

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    FAQ13

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 21, 1954 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Official sites
      • Streaming on "Cult Cinema Classics" YouTube Chanel
      • Streaming on "The Sprocket Vault" YouTube Chanel
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Heat Wave
    • Filming locations
      • The Showboat, Oldfield Road, Maidenhead, Berkshire, SL6 1TD, England, UK(Exterior of Lakeside Yacht Club)
    • Production company
      • Hammer Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 8m(68 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.65 : 1

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