A young girl is framed for a robbery, and sent to a harsh reform school, where she becomes the target of a vicious warden.A young girl is framed for a robbery, and sent to a harsh reform school, where she becomes the target of a vicious warden.A young girl is framed for a robbery, and sent to a harsh reform school, where she becomes the target of a vicious warden.
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- Detective
- (as Gordon Needham)
- Claire
- (as Benice Swanson)
- Edna
- (as Gwendoline Watts)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
The plot picks up by way of the usual melodramatic misunderstanding and a riot ensues.
Jill Ireland is very lovely but what this film really needed was a Diana Dors type, in a tight uniform, cotton colored hair and walking around slinging her hips in a tight uniform chomping gum and chain smoking.
This was bad, but no reason for John Charlesworth to gas himself over.
The last of five productions on which The Danzigers had recently splashed out on Technicolor; the girls look incongruously pretty in their pink uniforms, as well as the pink pyjamas they wear in the numerous scenes set in their enormous dormitory, which cameraman Jimmy Wilson never tires of showing off, energetically dollying back and forth and up to the ceiling to give us a good view of it. Unfortunately, as earlier commentators have complained, the film has also been saddled with an insistent jazz score of the kind ubiquitous in British and Continental crime films of the early 60's (in this case lifted from previous Danzigers productions) which keeps barging in when least called for, and providing just the requisite trashiness lacking elsewhere.
The story is about Ann Turner (Jill Ireland), a nice young girl who is sent to prison for a crime she didn't commit. Her adjustment to the prison life is tough at first, as the lady who lied and got her sent to prison is there! Fortunately, the nice Matron takes a liking for her and gives her a chance. But this chance is jeopardized when one of the wardens pushes one of the ladies to kill herself. Ann refuses to help her or the matron because she feels the riot that resulted from this was justified.
This film is an incredibly mild women in prison sort of picture-- nothing like the American versions such as "Caged". So, while the treatment by the warden is supposed to be harsh, it all seems incredibly lame when compared to the much tougher and more violent American women in prison films. American films have a strong suggestion of lesbianism and sadism...whereas this one looks like a prison film written by a charm school graduate! Not a bad film...but one that is incredibly tame and 'nice'!
Did you know
- TriviaReleased after the death of actor John Charlesworth, who committed suicide by gassing himself shortly after filming ended.
- GoofsClaire misses the butler's head by a lot when she swings whatever the heavy object was, but he is knocked out anyways.
- Quotes
Ann: The minute I'm finished I'm going straight up to Matron.
Mary: No - don't.
Ann: Lucy deliberately got me into trouble.
Mary: I know, but squealing on someone is the worst thing you can do in a place like this - it's a sort of unofficial rule. If you do, everybody will be against you.
Ann: Everybody is already. Except you.
Mary: But it will make things worse for you, Ann. Believe me - I know.
Ann: She can't keep getting away with it.
Mary: Anything else you might do - anything - any of the girls would forgive you. But narking, telling on someone - none of the girls would ever forgive you for that, even if it wasn't them you narked on.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- No Prison Walls
- Filming locations
- New Elstree Studios, The Waterfront, Elstree Road, Elstree, Borehamwood, Hertfordshire, England, UK(Studio, now The Waterfront Elstree)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 17 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1