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Meurtre sur un air de rock

Original title: Kill Me Tomorrow
  • 1957
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 20m
IMDb RATING
5.3/10
211
YOUR RATING
Meurtre sur un air de rock (1957)
CrimeDrama

A boozy old reporter finds his life is falling apart around him. He loses his wife and then his job. He is dragged back to reality when his son needs help. He goes to ask for his old job bac... Read allA boozy old reporter finds his life is falling apart around him. He loses his wife and then his job. He is dragged back to reality when his son needs help. He goes to ask for his old job back but finds his old boss dead in the office ...A boozy old reporter finds his life is falling apart around him. He loses his wife and then his job. He is dragged back to reality when his son needs help. He goes to ask for his old job back but finds his old boss dead in the office ...

  • Director
    • Terence Fisher
  • Writers
    • Robert Falconer
    • Paddy Manning O'Brine
  • Stars
    • Pat O'Brien
    • Lois Maxwell
    • George Coulouris
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.3/10
    211
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Terence Fisher
    • Writers
      • Robert Falconer
      • Paddy Manning O'Brine
    • Stars
      • Pat O'Brien
      • Lois Maxwell
      • George Coulouris
    • 13User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos8

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    Top cast35

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    Pat O'Brien
    Pat O'Brien
    • Bart Crosbie
    Lois Maxwell
    Lois Maxwell
    • Jill Brook
    George Coulouris
    George Coulouris
    • Heinz Webber
    Wensley Pithey
    • Inspector Lane
    Freddie Mills
    • Waxy Lister
    Ronald Adam
    Ronald Adam
    • Mr. Brook
    Robert Brown
    Robert Brown
    • Steve Ryan
    Richard Pasco
    Richard Pasco
    • Dr. Fisher
    April Olrich
    April Olrich
    • Bella Braganza
    Tommy Steele
    Tommy Steele
    • Self
    Peter Swanwick
    Peter Swanwick
    • Harrison
    • (as Peter Swanick)
    George Eugeniou
    • Nico
    Al Mulock
    • Rod
    Vic Wise
    • Lou
    Stuart Nichol
    • Sgt. Bellamy
    Anne Gilleno
      Louise Gainsborough
      Cal McCord
      • Joe
      • Director
        • Terence Fisher
      • Writers
        • Robert Falconer
        • Paddy Manning O'Brine
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews13

      5.3211
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      Featured reviews

      3info-eurokids-787-789014

      Kill Me Tomorrow

      This UK, homegrown, studio based movie, was not one of the best films of the period. The great American star Pat O'Brien, who often played a priest or a good guy in his roles, many opposite his real life friend James Cagney, was in life, the nice man he betrayed. On the set of Kill Me Tomorrow, he gave me his dedicated photo and wrote to my mother when he returned to the states. I doubt if movie stars of today would have the time or thought to be so nice to child actors. Lois Maxwell of Miss Moneypenny fame, was also wonderful in her role. However, the film was rather disjointed and Tommy Steel's introduction was marred by his over-long performance. The film can be rented from Amazon and the poster is now available on the Internet. Good fun if you like to see black and white London in the 1950's. Raymond Russell, boy in hospital bed.
      5CinemaSerf

      Kill Me Tomorrow

      "Crosbie" (Pat O'Brien) is a jaded old journalist who is involved in a car accident that robs him of his wife and seriously injures his son. Now facing a bill of £1,000 to send him to Switzerland for urgent treatment, he becomes desperate and turns to the dubious "Webber" (George Coulouris) and offers to take the rap for the recent death of his old boss if he will fund the surgery. What "Crosbie" hadn't figured on, though, was the police actually wanting to get to the bottom of the crime and "Insp. Lane" (Wensley Pithey) isn't convinced he has his man! The only solution for "Crosbie" now might be to team up with fellow reporter "Jill" (Lois Maxwell) and see if they can solve the crime themselves. It took me a while to recognise a very young Richard Pascoe as the doctor and Tommy Steele also features briefly, but otherwise this is all a rather formulaic drama that is probably fifteen minutes longer than it needs to be. It's reasonably paced and passes the time, but you won't recall it afterwards.
      6bkoganbing

      A Desperate Bargain

      In Kill Me Tomorrow it was Pat O'Brien's turn to be an American actor who was past his prime as a leading man in the states to turn up in a British feature film. The idea was to give it greater marketability in the States. I well remember seeing a lot of these type of films as the bottom half of doublebills in my neighborhood movie theater.

      O'Brien who had done a lot of noir type features in America fits comfortably with the genre in the UK. Even his Irish countenance is hardly out of place as so many Irish people from Ulster and from the Republic were living and working in Great Britain.

      O'Brien is an alcoholic reporter working for a Fleet Street paper run by editor Ronald Adam. Adam's lost patience with O'Brien, a year before Pat's wife was killed in an automobile accident that he caused driving drunk. Now he's got a second piece of bad news, his son is ill with a tumor behind an eye and needs one quick operation from a specialist in Switzerland. A thousand pounds would cover it.

      Ronald Adam has bigger fish to fry than O'Brien's problems. He's running an expose on some criminal rackets in London headed by George Coulouris. A stoolie after giving information to Adam is murdered and Coulouris and assorted hoods come calling. Adam winds up shot and then O'Brien arrives and Adam gives a dying declaration as to who did it.

      But Pat's concern is the boy and he makes an unusual bargain with Coulouris. For a thousand pounds, he'll take the fall for him and confess to the murder.

      I have to say that this was one of the more unusual plot twists in a film I've ever seen and for that reason it rates a cut above your average noir film. The production values were adequate, no more than that, the players gave a good account of themselves. Lois Maxwell soon to be Ms. Moneypenny in a few years is Adam's niece and even though she sees O'Brien with gun in hand leaving the premises and calls Scotland Yard, she still believes in him.

      In fact the scheme is badly thought out, but it was thought out by a desperate man. A timeline and forensics shoot O'Brien's confession full of holes, but he insists on playing it his way as movie favorites do.

      Two interesting people have small roles in Kill Me Tomorrow. One is former Light Heavyweight Champion Freddie Mills, a sports hero in the British Isles plays one of Coulouris's thugs. Mills met a tragic end a few years later, a suicide that some think was murder.

      The other person was Great Britain's first rock and roll star Tommy Steele. He sings one of his early hits Rebel Rock in a coffee bar that Coulouris owns and is the headquarters for his enterprises. Tommy is not one of the crooks however. Having seen a more mature Steele in Half A Sixpence, Finian's Rainbow, and The Happiest Millionaire, it was interesting to see him in his rock and roll roots. I shouldn't actually say that because Steele as a performer would have been right at home in the British Music Hall Theater and has been for most of his career. He's got an infectious personality and style that has made me one of his biggest fans.

      So while O'Brien is in the film for the American market, I've no doubt that Kill Me Tomorrow did well at the British box office with Tommy Steele performing. Kill Me Tomorrow is a good B noir thriller that could hold its own with America's product.
      3Maverick1962

      And Introducing Tommy Steele

      'B' picture mainly interesting to me as I saw Tommy Steele's name listed first and I have tickets to see him in 2016!! Rock on. However, back to the picture. Directed by Terence Fisher and starring American gangster actor Pat O'Brien, near the end of his illustrious supporting career to stars like James Cagney. Quite how Terence Fisher went from this dud to the wonderful The Curse of Frankenstein with Peter Cushing in a matter of months is beyond me. Anyway, O'Brien plays a booze riddled newspaper man who needs a £1000 to get his son cured of an eye tumour that will almost certainly kill him if it's not fixed pronto. He gets involved with gangsters led by George Coulouris and the whole thing becomes a bit convoluted but O'Brien still somehow ends up getting the girl, played by Lois Maxwell (Moneypenny from the early Bond films) who looks young enough to be his granddaughter. Ug! gross, particularly when he tries to kiss her in the final scene and Lois appears to turn her head away. Still, it was funny seeing Tommy Steele rocking away like an idiot which is how these young stars were presented in this type of picture back then. Another reason I love watching these old films is to see the character actors and actresses, most of them long dead. Boxer Freddie Mills, Al Mulock, Robert Brown, Richard Pasco, Ronald Adam, Wensley Pithey, all familiar faces to me. Always worth a look.
      4geoffm60295

      A mediocre drama

      This is another 50's low budget film that parachutes an ageing American actor, Pat O'Brien into a limp drama, hoping to inject interest and a wider audience. The problem here is with the casting of slow moving O'Brien, who looks overweight and seems frankly bored with the storyline. Credibility is further strained when you see the age of O'Brien's young son in a hospital bed, fighting for his life. The lack of reality is further ratcheted up when elderly and paunchy O'Brien defeats the lantern jawed, Freddie Mills, ex world light heavyweight in a fist fight! Richard Pascoe, plays a doctor but his lifeless performance seems to sum up the film. Also, Ronald Adam, a stalwart of countless British films, is wasted by being miscast as the newspaper editor. The tedious storyline wasn't exactly livened up by the then British rock 'n' roll, toothy, blond Tommy Steele, who appears in a cameo part. His two songs are totally forgettable. Overall, a very dull and ploddy film.

      Related interests

      James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in Les Soprano (1999)
      Crime
      Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
      Drama

      Storyline

      Edit

      Did you know

      Edit
      • Trivia
        Tommy Steele receives an 'Introducing' credit singing "Rebel Rock".
      • Goofs
        In the coffee bar, Tommy Steele is singing on his own with a guitar, but not only can drums and bass be clearly heard, but also a horn section as well.
      • Connections
        Featured in Neil Sean Meets...: Tommy Steele (2015)
      • Soundtracks
        Rock With The Caveman
        (uncredited)

        Written by Lionel Bart, Mike Pratt and Tommy Steele

        Sung by Tommy Steele

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      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • May 1957 (United Kingdom)
      • Country of origin
        • United Kingdom
      • Language
        • English
      • Also known as
        • Kill Me Tomorrow
      • Filming locations
        • Southall Studios, Southall, Middlesex, England, UK(studio: A British Film made at Southall Studios, Southall, Middx.)
      • Production company
        • Francis Searle Productions
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 1h 20m(80 min)
      • Color
        • Black and White

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