In 1949, when his former British war buddy is charged with murder, American lawyer Adam Hayward goes to England to see if he can help.In 1949, when his former British war buddy is charged with murder, American lawyer Adam Hayward goes to England to see if he can help.In 1949, when his former British war buddy is charged with murder, American lawyer Adam Hayward goes to England to see if he can help.
- Alex Summerfield, Robert's Sister in Law
- (as Patricia Wayne)
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The plot concerns RM travelling to England to help clear an old army buddy of a murder charge. There is some mild suspense during the last twenty minutes when the identity of a secret witness is revealed. Leading lady Patricia Cutts (called Patrcia Wayne here) is one of those rather horsey English blondes with a cut glass accent. Her acting is rather stilted and there is little chemistry between her and Montgomery. It's a far cry from his wonderful acting/direction job on Lady In The Lake.
It's more an actor's show than a movie, with Montgomery offering his last theatrical performance -- he also directed . It's certainly watchable throughout, but little more. With Leslie Banks, Felix Aylmer, Jenny Laird and James Hayter.
It bears a striking resemblance to the similarly titled 'Hostile Witness' (also directed by and starring a visitor from Hollywood, on that occasion Ray Milland), even down to the judge being played by Felix Aylmer; the later film's most obvious concession to the passage of time being that that was in colour.
Here he plays a tough NYC attorney who is urged by his secretary to not just send money to the man who saved his life in the war but to cross the Atlantic to assist in his defense.
Montgomery directed and while there's a blessed minimum of cutesy quaintness added in the English village setting, it has a consistently British "literacy" bordering on wordiness, perhaps not out of place in courtroom scenes. It's all very low key and well done. Robert Montgomery had not lost any of his style since his early days and is still wry and bemused in one of his final acting roles.
Did you know
- TriviaFinal acting role for Robert Montgomery in a theatrical film. He continued with acting roles on TV as well as directing some theatrically released films.
- Quotes
Adam Heyward: Well, I don't know what you call it here, but at home we'd say I was a 'character witness'. A witness as to the prisoner's character, my Lord.
The British Judge: Yes, I see. Let us say rather a witness to the prisoner's reputation.
Adam Heyward: We would say character, sir.
The British Judge: Mr Heywood. It was written long ago by an eminent divine, a man's reputation is what his neighbours think of him. His character is what God knows of him.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Ken Adam: Designing Bond (2000)
- How long is Eye Witness?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 40m(100 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1