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Smokescreen

  • 1964
  • 1h 10m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
565
YOUR RATING
Smokescreen (1964)
Suspense MysteryWhodunnitComedyCrimeMystery

A fastidious insurance assessor investigates a potential case of insurance fraud in Brighton and uncovers a murder.A fastidious insurance assessor investigates a potential case of insurance fraud in Brighton and uncovers a murder.A fastidious insurance assessor investigates a potential case of insurance fraud in Brighton and uncovers a murder.

  • Director
    • Jim O'Connolly
  • Writer
    • Jim O'Connolly
  • Stars
    • Peter Vaughan
    • John Carson
    • Yvonne Romain
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    565
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jim O'Connolly
    • Writer
      • Jim O'Connolly
    • Stars
      • Peter Vaughan
      • John Carson
      • Yvonne Romain
    • 20User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos4

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    Top cast23

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    Peter Vaughan
    Peter Vaughan
    • Roper
    John Carson
    John Carson
    • Trevor Bayliss
    Yvonne Romain
    Yvonne Romain
    • Janet Dexter
    Gerald Flood
    Gerald Flood
    • Graham Turner
    Glynn Edwards
    Glynn Edwards
    • Inspector Wright
    John Glyn-Jones
    • Player
    Sam Kydd
    Sam Kydd
    • Hotel Waiter
    Deryck Guyler
    Deryck Guyler
    • Station Master
    • (as Derek Guyler)
    Penny Morrell
    • Helen - Turner's Secretary
    David Gregory
    • Pete, The Smudger
    Jill Curzon
    • June
    Barbara Hicks
    Barbara Hicks
    • Miss Breen
    Bert Palmer
    • Barman
    Tom Gill
    • Reception Clerk
    Edward Ogden
    • Police Sergeant
    Anthony Dawes
    • John Dexter
    Romo Gorrara
    Romo Gorrara
    • Taxi Driver
    Maja Hafernik
    • Maid
    • Director
      • Jim O'Connolly
    • Writer
      • Jim O'Connolly
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews20

    6.9565
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    Featured reviews

    7DPMay

    Simple little mystery film that oozes quality

    In films, so many mysteries are investigated by police officers, investigative reporters or family members, all of whom usually conform to a certain 'type', so it's a refreshing change to find a film such as 'Smokescreen' where the person doing the snooping is a very atypical character, a quirky insurance claims investigator who goes about searching for the truth in an efficient yet coldly detached manner. In bringing this character to life, the film affords us a rare early leading role from the excellent Peter Vaughan, but just about every character in this piece is portrayed by a gem of a British actor from the period, even those that appear rather fleetingly.

    Added to which, the film is beautifully shot, making very good use of its Brighton location yet not to the point of distracting from the plot. From the dramatic opening scene, in which two young lovers on a clifftop have their tryst disturbed by a burning car zooming along nearby perilously out of control before it plummets over the edge, it is apparent that this is a film of superior quality. Whether or not the car's owner was actually in the vehicle when it plunged into the sea isn't clear, and that is the question which Vaughan's character, Roper, must find the answer to. And even he himself is guarding a secret, as becomes apparent among the various twists and turns this pleasing yarn takes.

    My only sense of disappointment as I watched it was that I'd worked out the solution long before the end. Or so I thought, for at the climax I discovered that the film outsmarted me. See if it manages to outsmart you.
    7keith.york

    Ignore the zero budget, a fun movie!

    Made on a zero budget as a programme filler in the mid-Sixties. Don't let this put you off. Worth watching for the quirky, amusing script and the central performance from the always excellent Peter Vaughan. The murder mystery isn't perhaps up to Agatha Christie's standard, but the idea of insurance investigator as detective is a fairly novel one. (OK so they did it in 'Double Indemnity') Also a decent document of Britain in the early sixties.
    7jjcarr-49015

    Above average, low-budget fare

    A blazing car crashes over a cliff. No body is found. It belonged to a co-owner of a business. Both owners had recently taken out large insurance policies. The insurance company is naturally suspicious and send an agent (Peter Vaughn) to investigate. The time frame of the accident adds to his suspicions. To complicate matters it turns out that there was an offer to buy the business that the missing man rejected but which his partner wanted to accept. To further complicate matters the local insurer (John Carson) who sold the policies loves the missing man's wife (the beautiful Yvonne Romain).

    The film has a bit more depth than normal B-movie fare. Throughout there is a running theme about Vaughan's expenses. This seems to be for low comedic effect but later we learn why he is so tight with money. Similarly with the denouement we learn why the film's title is appropriate.

    This is a pleasant, undemanding little B-movie for all the family. I give it a 7 because it's a well-made, well-written, well-acted low budget film lacking star names. Had it had an A-list budget I'd have given it a 6.
    6trimmerb1234

    Ealing on a shoe-string

    A gently, wryly humorous fairly engrossing who-done-what lacking top names but packed with familiar and able players who'd supported many a British classic. Sam Kydd - was there a British post-war film without him as able seaman, workman, stuttering gang-member or as here,once again, a waiter? Derek Guyler in a neat cameo reminding us of a time before "have-nice-day" came to these shores. Typecast they might have been but familiar because they were the best of their type. I didn't then know the name of Penny Morell but certainly recognised a top performance as the very obliging but drunken secretary. Budget production it might have been but one gets the impression of an esprit de corps of director, cast and crew of professionals working for beer-money but rightly proud nevertheless.
    8boblipton

    Hillarious And Effective Comedy-Mystery

    A flaming car goes over the cliff near Brighton to land in the water hundreds of feet below. There's an insurance policy to be paid out, a bright new one just taken out, for a hundred thousand pounds, so his suspicious boss sends insurance investigator Peter Vaughan to poke around. There's no clear motive for what happened, since business was good and so was his marriage to beautiful, rich Yvonne Romaine, but it's clear that the driver faked his death to clear out.His boss, however, insists on a motive..... and that leads to some interesting insights.

    Vaughan offers a delightful performance of a cartoonish-looking man in homburg and black umbrella, a skinflint as interested in cheating his insurance company out of shillings as of saving them from a false claim for a hundred thousand pounds..... even as they put him up at the most expensive hotel in Brighton while he investigates. He looks terrified trying to get information out of man-hungry Penny Morrell by getting her squiffed, and the question of who did what and why is brilliantly hidden under a trail of red herrings.

    Vaughan is probably best known these days for his role on GAME OF THRONES. His role was probably written out when he fell ill and died in 2016 at the age of 93.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The opening shot of the burning car driving off the cliff and hitting the rocks on its way into the sea was used in TV episode Car in Flames (1962). In Smokescreen, the shot included a brief cutaway of two lovers who witnessed the incident; in the TV episode, the shot was continuous.
    • Goofs
      A running joke in the film is that both the main character and his insurance company are mean with expenses, and yet they put him up at The Grand Hotel in Brighton - the most expensive one in the town even in 1964.
    • Quotes

      [Roper has been sitting in the hotel bar, eating the free crisps that they provide, but not ordering anything to drink. Finally Helen arrives]

      Barman: She's arrived. Now he's *sure* to buy something.

      Hotel Waiter: You want to bet? He's liable to order whisky and water - without the whisky.

    • Connections
      Features No Hiding Place: Car in Flames (1962)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • 1964 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • L'accident d'auto
    • Filming locations
      • Seaford Head, Seaford, East Sussex, England, UK(Dexter's burning car falls over the cliff, witnessed by the Smudger and June)
    • Production company
      • Butcher's Film Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 10m(70 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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