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The Hypnotist

  • 1957
  • Approved
  • 1h 13m
IMDb RATING
5.8/10
176
YOUR RATING
Paul Carpenter, Roland Culver, William Hartnell, and Patricia Roc in The Hypnotist (1957)
CrimeThriller

After a test pilot is injured in a plane crash, his fiancée takes him to a psychiatrist. The psychiatrist is unhappily married and has a crush on the fiancée, and attempts to hypnotize the p... Read allAfter a test pilot is injured in a plane crash, his fiancée takes him to a psychiatrist. The psychiatrist is unhappily married and has a crush on the fiancée, and attempts to hypnotize the pilot into murdering his wife.After a test pilot is injured in a plane crash, his fiancée takes him to a psychiatrist. The psychiatrist is unhappily married and has a crush on the fiancée, and attempts to hypnotize the pilot into murdering his wife.

  • Director
    • Montgomery Tully
  • Writers
    • Falkland L. Cary
    • Montgomery Tully
  • Stars
    • Roland Culver
    • Patricia Roc
    • Paul Carpenter
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.8/10
    176
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Montgomery Tully
    • Writers
      • Falkland L. Cary
      • Montgomery Tully
    • Stars
      • Roland Culver
      • Patricia Roc
      • Paul Carpenter
    • 11User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos2

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    Top cast25

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    Roland Culver
    Roland Culver
    • Doctor Francis Pelham
    Patricia Roc
    Patricia Roc
    • Mary Foster
    Paul Carpenter
    • Valentine Neal
    William Hartnell
    William Hartnell
    • Detective Inspector Ross
    Gordon Boyd
    • Detective Sergeant Davis
    • (as Gordon Needham)
    Ellen Pollock
    Ellen Pollock
    • Barbara Barton
    Kay Callard
    • Susie
    Martin Wyldeck
    Martin Wyldeck
    • Doctor Bradford
    Oliver Johnston
    Oliver Johnston
    • Doctor Kenyon
    • (as Oliver Johnson)
    Tom Tann
    • Doctor Pelham's Manservant
    • (as Tom Tan)
    Edgar Driver
    • Porter
    Chris Barber
    • Self - Bandleader: Chris Barber's Jazz Band
    • (uncredited)
    Hilda Barry
    • Mary's Housekeeper
    • (uncredited)
    Jessica Cairns
    • Mary's Secretary
    • (uncredited)
    Chris Barber's Jazz Band
    • Jazz Band
    • (uncredited)
    Tim Fitzgerald
    • Valentine as a boy
    • (uncredited)
    Helen Gilmer
    • Nurse
    • (uncredited)
    Gordon Harris
    • Observer in Control Tower
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Montgomery Tully
    • Writers
      • Falkland L. Cary
      • Montgomery Tully
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews11

    5.8176
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    Featured reviews

    6howardmorley

    Can someone be hypnotised to murder?

    I rated this film 6/10 as just above average.The other reviewer disclosed the murderer but anyone who watches this film could easily work it out.This because there are relatively few characters to choose from and apart from the obvious "red herring" it could only be one person.Audiences are so versed and educated in modern crime thrillers so they steer past the obvious, to wit: 1.Do not suspect the obvious hero whom the author points you towards.2.Ignore slightly sinister extras who have little or no dialogue - the audience cannot feel a rapprochement with them.3.When the motive appears in the screenplay suspect the character with the most to gain.

    I vaguely remember Paul Carpenter (the lead actor) who was a Canadian actor from Montreal and who appeared quite regularly on British TV in the 50s and early 60s but his resume is strictly "B" rated and the British actors are similarly not of the first box office magnitude.The whole film reminds me of a typical "B" feature production value and budget film of the 50s in my youth (I am 64 now) when the cinema goer first had a cartoon, then Pathe News, then the "B" feature and finally "The Big Film", for the price of admission.

    I always like to look at the cars, taxis, lack of parking restrictions in London shown in films during the 50s and of course the clothes fashions and manner of speaking.It's part of the fascination for me and why I like to buy dvds of this vintage.
    1lucyrfisher

    Dull and pointless, apart from...

    ...the compendium of clichés about psychiatry that emerge in the first ten minutes or so.

    "Psychosomatic illness is caused by buried trauma." "Everything you have ever thought or experienced is recorded in your mind, but you've suppressed it. If we can just recover those repressed memories... "

    I'm looking forward to London's empty streets and a nameless blonde.

    Didn't they have carrier bags in 1956?
    4geoffm60295

    Dull, tedious and uninspiring.

    This has B film written all over it. The dull and incredulous storyline, together with a lack lustre cast of one dimensional characters, made me lose interest fairly quickly. I suppose the film makers hoped that by weaving a story around an American test pilot, it would give the film an excitement and transatlantic appeal, but sadly the hero, played by Paul Carpenter is uninspiring, and merely plods his way through the film, failing to convince the audience that he's having some sort of mental breakdown. The scene where he wanders around London in a daze is tedious in the extreme! The only actor who stood out was the wonderfully urbane and cultured actor, Roland Culver, playing the dubious and unscrupulous psychiatrist. Below average film, strictly to be seen on a very rainy day!
    6robert-temple-1

    Hypnotic crime

    This is an interesting mystery film about a murder involving hypnotic suggestion by an unscrupulous hypnotist. The story is set in London. The hypnotist is played by the urbane Roland Culver, always impeccably dressed and equally impeccably mannered. In one scene, he stretches his arms forward in order to free his shirt cuffs, encumbered with cufflinks, from the confines of his jacket sleeves, a mannerism rarely seen these days, but once a commonplace amongst gentlemen of the old school. (It signified 'getting down to business', and resembles the pathetic attempts by Prime Minister David Cameron in our own time to show that he is 'getting down to business' by rolling up his sleeves after taking off his jacket. We are expected to believe that by doing that, Shirtsleeve Dave will save the economy from collapse. But pull the other shirtsleeve!) Culver plays a retired psychiatrist who has written numerous books on psychiatry and on 'hypnosis and the unconscious mind'. He is persuaded by his 'almost niece', played by pert Patricia Roc, to treat her fiancée, a test pilot who has survived a crash, and who has sudden and recurring fits inspired by an unknown subconscious fear. Eventually, the trouble is traced to the traumatic death of his mother when he was a child, and his repression of the horrific memories associated with the incident. But in the course of treatment by Culver, the fiancée, played by the rather boring Canadian actor Paul Carpenter (who died at the age of only 42 in 1964), proves so suggestible, that Culver decides to make use of him for a nefarious purpose. Culver's ex-wife lives upstairs in the same building, and he wants to kill her, so he hypnotizes Carpenter and instructs him to go upstairs and do it, but to remember nothing of it afterwards (what is known as post-hypnotic amnesia). The murder duly takes place, and a police investigation seems to be getting nowhere. Will Patricia Roc and Paul Carpenter be able to figure out the truth in time? And if so, how can they prove it? This film is important for containing a lengthy scene of Chris Barber and his Jazz Band playing in a London club, which all admirers of Chris Barber will want to see. (He played 'British Dixieland', and did it very well.) The film was released in 1957 but filmed in 1956. There is a lengthy portion of the film where we see Carpenter wandering around London in a daze, having fled a hypnosis session before being properly aroused from the hypnotic state. (Yes, this sort of thing can happen.) It is astonishing to see the streets of London practically devoid of traffic apart from a few old-fashioned taxis, and there is also a conspicuous lack of pedestrians. London, which today is so over-crowded and teeming that the crowds are spilling onto the streets everywhere and the underground cannot hold them so that at some hours of the day it can take 20 minutes even to squeeze into an underground station while one is left outside in the bad weather, was then practically a ghost town even ten years after the War. Anyone interested in the history of London will want to see these many scenes of London in 1956, with its conspicuous lack of foreigners and sleepy state of inactivity. This film is useful in portraying the criminal abuse of hypnosis, and though there is a feeble and unconvincing declaration at the end that it could not happen, the truth about the criminal abuses of hypnosis may be found in the book OPEN TO SUGGESTION, which gathers together 150 years of case histories of this sort of thing. The film was made under the title of THE HYPNOTIST but released as Scotland YARD DRAGNET, possibly to heighten its commercial appeal. It was directed by Montgomery Tully (1904-1988) and based upon a play by Falkland L. Cary (1987-1989). The film is interesting despite being somewhat mediocre. When Carpenter is wandering around in a trance state, he meets a young girl who takes him in, feeling sorry for him because he cannot remember his name or where he comes from, and doesn't know anyone but her. These scenes are poignant and Kay Callard with her big enquiring eyes is very effective as this 'Jazz Club Blond', as she is called in the cast list. She appeared in 36 films, but was never sufficiently recognised. She is one of the many British actresses to be unjustifiably forgotten, even though she lived to the age of 74, dying in 2008 in Peterborough. She appeared together with Paul Carpenter again in the B crime thriller ASSIGNMENT REDHEAD in 1958. Anyone interested in fifties fashions will be interested to see Patricia Roc's clothes in this film. One skirt has a multiple layered petticoat so thick that the skirt spreads out like a portable tent and gyrates when she turns. Her mannerisms are also perfect 'fifties woman' mannerisms, with a frozen arched brow and a permanently indulgent smile which eagerly awaits the next clever remark which any man cares to make to her. We have come some way since then, though whether men are any cleverer I doubt, especially as they no longer have submissive and indulgent smiles from expectant women encouraging them to say things.
    4malcolmgsw

    Dull and disappointing

    Amusing to note the American title of Scotland Yard Dragnet since there is no Dragnet.It really is a pretty atrocious ragbag of a film.You get the impression that Monte Tully got out a bundle of rejected scripts and took parts out of each,so disjointed is the story. The episode in the jazz club and the meeting with a pick up sees to have no connection with the rest ofthe film.Paul Carpenterwanders around the centre of 1956 London,and that is the most interesting part of the film Music is used in an unsuccessful attempt to beef up the drama.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Unusually for an Anglo Amalgamated release (which normally went out on the ABC circuit), "The Hypnotist" was released on Rank's Gaumont circuit in July 1957 as the bottom half of a double bill with Universal's Douglas Sirk melodrama "Interlude". Even more uncommonly, the double bill played for three weeks at the Gaumont, Haymarket from July 4th,1957. Usually, B movies did not get a West End screening.
    • Quotes

      Mary Foster: Then get him away from these trick cyclists. Castor oil's moved a lot more mountains than Dr Freud ever has!

      Doctor Kenyon: I'd do anything to help him Doctor - anything at all.

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 30, 1957 (Denmark)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Scotland Yard Dragnet
    • Filming locations
      • Queen's Gate Terrace, London, Greater London, England, UK(on location)
    • Production company
      • Merton Park Studios
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 13 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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    Paul Carpenter, Roland Culver, William Hartnell, and Patricia Roc in The Hypnotist (1957)
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