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Ultimatum

Original title: Seven Days to Noon
  • 1950
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 34m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
2.3K
YOUR RATING
Ultimatum (1950)
DramaThriller

When a scientist threatens to detonate a powerful bomb in the heart of London, Scotland Yard has just seven days to find him before it is too late.When a scientist threatens to detonate a powerful bomb in the heart of London, Scotland Yard has just seven days to find him before it is too late.When a scientist threatens to detonate a powerful bomb in the heart of London, Scotland Yard has just seven days to find him before it is too late.

  • Directors
    • John Boulting
    • Roy Boulting
  • Writers
    • Frank Harvey
    • Roy Boulting
    • Paul Dehn
  • Stars
    • Barry Jones
    • André Morell
    • Olive Sloane
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    2.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • John Boulting
      • Roy Boulting
    • Writers
      • Frank Harvey
      • Roy Boulting
      • Paul Dehn
    • Stars
      • Barry Jones
      • André Morell
      • Olive Sloane
    • 44User reviews
    • 29Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 Oscar
      • 1 win & 2 nominations total

    Photos95

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    Top cast86

    Edit
    Barry Jones
    Barry Jones
    • Professor Willingdon
    André Morell
    André Morell
    • Superintendent Folland
    • (as Andre Morell)
    Olive Sloane
    Olive Sloane
    • Goldie
    Sheila Manahan
    • Ann Willingdon
    Hugh Cross
    • Stephen Lane
    Joan Hickson
    Joan Hickson
    • Mrs. Peckett
    Ronald Adam
    Ronald Adam
    • The Prime Minister
    Marie Ney
    Marie Ney
    • Mrs. Willingdon
    Wyndham Goldie
    • Rev. Burgess
    Russell Waters
    • Det. Davis
    Martin Boddey
    Martin Boddey
    • Gen. Willoughby
    Frederick Allen
    • Self - BBC Newsreader
    Victor Maddern
    Victor Maddern
    • Private Jackson
    Geoffrey Keen
    Geoffrey Keen
    • Alf
    Merrill Mueller
    • Self - American Commentator
    Joss Ackland
    Joss Ackland
    • Station Policeman
    • (uncredited)
    Gerald Andersen
    • Bit Part
    • (uncredited)
    Jean Anderson
    Jean Anderson
    • Mother at Train Station
    • (uncredited)
    • Directors
      • John Boulting
      • Roy Boulting
    • Writers
      • Frank Harvey
      • Roy Boulting
      • Paul Dehn
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews44

    7.02.3K
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    Featured reviews

    7richard-meredith27

    Still effective and thoughtful after 55 years

    The Boulting Brothers stray from their usual cheery British comedy films to make this effective and thoughtful thriller. Leaving the plotting to one side, it is remarkable as, at that time, the Government was laying the basis for the U.K.'s independent atomic deterrent and the effects of Atomic and Nuclear testing were never discussed. (ask the poor soldiers who watched the tests in Australia!) The issue is never resolved, and in the end the Professor can't make his case publicly.

    Part of the film shows the evacuation of London. It harks back to the great evacuations of 1939/4 and invokes the same spirit. Oddly enough, Wartime studios had not portrayed the Home Front (other than nods to Fire Services or War-Work)and perhaps this is a belated look back. It does show one incident that would never have passed the wartime censor's pencil- the shooting of looters.

    Other cultural notes: How easy it was for the studios to clear London even then the most traffic congested city in England, and to get the army to lend hundreds of personnel (and demonstrate their efficiency). And the great attraction of the old 1950's films: glimpses of bomb sites, long lost street scenes and forgotten buildings.

    Watch it and remember its been 55 years since this film was made and 7/7. I don't think the genre was attempted again. Instead Studios turned to Sci-Fi ( a thin disguise for the external Russian menace).
    8Theo Robertson

    Intelligent And Thought Provoking

    Someone gets hold of an atomic bomb and decides to resort to blackmail . Boy I haven't seen a movie like this for almost a whole week . Can't story tellers think up something new ? Hey wait a minute the blackmailer is a white English guy called Professor Willoughby and SEVEN DAYS TO NOON was made in 1950 !

    What can I say about this underrated British masterpiece ? It gives a whole new meaning to the word " Groundbreaking " , every time you see a movie like TRUE LIES featuring a bunch of nutters trying to nuke a city you know where they got the idea from . What makes SEVEN DAYS TO NOON stand out from the movies that followed it is the way it's written and directed . it'd be so easy for Willoughby to be a complete raving headcase but he's written in such a way you'll believe he existed in real life , he's someone who became a scientist to improve the lot of humanity and because of politicians he finds his work being used for destructive means . Do I see hints that this character influenced Nigel Kneale when he wrote his Quatermass stories ? Willoughby's well thought out arguments are interesting even though you might not agree with them .The scenario is helped even further by casting Barry Jones in the role , Jones being an actor who I'd no knowledge of hence I wasn't watching a well known face doing an acting performance I was watching a scientist with serious internal dilemmas . The reality is heightened even further by the Boulting brothers directing in the style of a documentary very similar to the way Fred Zimmerman later directed DAY OF THE JACKAL

    As much as I've praised it there are one or two flaws . One is I couldn't take seriously the idea that the government would announce the truth and then evacuate London . Of course Willoughby not being a terrorist is essential to the plot , he won't detonate the bomb if alerted but again the government of the day would know this so why evacuate ? Think about it: Would he be more likely or less likely to press the button if there's ten million Londoners still in the city . I also found Prof Willoughby's ultimate fate very contrived

    One other point of interest of this movie is that you're aware of how everything is different in Britain over the preceding decades . They'd be no need to stick posters all over London because television has become the medium for communication , ration books disappeared in 1952 and Britain still had a big enough army to spare four divsions to search for one man , so as a period piece alone SEVEN DAYS TO NOON makes interesting viewing

    As a footnote the montage scenes of the soldiers combing London for Willoughby were reused for Hammer's cinema version of THE QUATERMASS EXPERIMENT . What makes this even more interesting is that the screenwriter of SEVEN DAYS TO NOON James Bernard ( Who won an Oscar for this screenplay along with Paul Dehn ) composed the music for THE QUATERMASS EXPERIMENT
    7bkoganbing

    Package Of Destruction

    Seven Days To Noon is ironically one of those films that has grown into the times rather than be dated. It's certainly a relevant film given the threat of nuclear terror today.

    But back in 1950 I don't believe the technical expertise was there so that Barry Jones or anyone else could have put a device like that in a briefcase. Take a look at pictures of Fat Man and Little Boy the code names for the weapons dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Those things could not have fit in a briefcase and developments hadn't advanced that far in five years. Now sad to say it actually could be done.

    Barry Jones is an atomic scientist who is suffering from fatigue and overwork and a questioning mind about what exactly he's developing. His mind snaps and he takes one of the weapons Great Britain has been developing and sends a letter to the Prime Minister. Issue a statement you'll stop the program or he's going to explode his package on Sunday at high noon.

    That sets up a manhunt for Jones throughout the United Kingdom, but especially of course in London. His note does specify the seat of the government. Andre Morrell as a Scotland Yard Inspector, Hugh Cross as one of his fellow scientists who will have to disarm the device once located, and Sheila Manahan as his daughter lead the search for Jones and the package of destruction he has.

    Despite the fact that it was a technological impossibility in 1950, Seven Days To Noon is still an effective thriller of a film, worthy of a Hitchcock. It's interesting that they came close to getting Jones a few times before they do catch up. Best in the film is Olive Sloane the frowzy former music hall entertainer who Jones holds as a hostage for a while. She wants to do her bit as well as she's trying to get to Aldershot to entertain the troops.

    Seven Days To Noon got an Oscar for Best Screen Story. It remains one of the few films that actually grew technologically and became more relevant now than when it first came out.
    8mail-2978

    Good entertainment with a plot still current today

    In this day and age when atomic weapons are everybody's bow and arrows the plot of this film has never been more up to date. The setting of the film in London with the devastation left by the bombing in World War II made a great back drop for the story. I can remember when London really looked like that. Both the plot and the characterisation are believable and the acting more than adequate. But star status must go to the people of London who back in 1950 still had the camaraderie and spirit forged by six years of war. This was a time when people still looked out for each other and this come over well as the story unfolds. With our video making mobile telephones and instant access to news this film may seem tame and dated but don't let the black and white format fool you this is a good story, well told and well worth seeing. Oh, and by the way, we really did talk like that back in 1950.
    boris-26

    Brief review

    An excellent suspense thriller! Kindly old Prof Bullington (Barry Jones) gives the British government an ultimatum- unless they cease all atomic testing by the weekend, he will set off an A-Bomb in the center of London. Andre Morell heads the task force to find "the needle in one helluva haystack." Done in a documentary style that shoves the details and urgency of a great manhunt onto the audience. However, the human element of the story (i.e what Bullington's daughter has to go through, the dear sweet ol' actress Bullington holds captive, and the mass evacuation of London) is not lost for a millisecond. Superb acting (Especially by Morell and Jones) and writing. Do not miss!!

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      James Bernard was most famous for composing the scores to numerous Hammer horrors, including Le Cauchemar de Dracula (1958). Ironically, however, it was for this film that he won his only Oscar - as co-writer of the screenplay, not the music.
    • Goofs
      Further to the comment of "In 1950, a nuclear weapon would weigh at least six metric tonnes. It certainly would not fit into a small Gladstone bag as shown in this movie" - the word "nuclear" is never used in this film. It is clearly stated that it is a new secret weapon, a UR 12, which does fit into a small Gladstone bag. It isn't an atom bomb (the term used at that time).
    • Quotes

      Superintendent Folland: Repressing of fear is like trying to hold down the lid of a boiling kettle. Something's got to give eventually.

    • Crazy credits
      Opening credits prologue: 1950
    • Connections
      Referenced in Le pacificateur (1997)

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    FAQ16

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • December 22, 1950 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Seven Days to Noon
    • Filming locations
      • High Street Kensington Underground Station, Kensington High Street, Kensington, London, Greater London, England, UK(steps down to station)
    • Production companies
      • London Film Productions
      • Boulting Brothers
      • British Lion Film Corporation
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 34m(94 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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