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IMDbPro

Hidden Homicide

  • 1959
  • Approved
  • 1h 10m
IMDb RATING
5.6/10
112
YOUR RATING
Hidden Homicide (1959)
Mystery

A man wakes up in a strange location with a gun in his hand and a dead body, not knowing how the whole thing happened. He doesn't remember anything about the whole scenario.A man wakes up in a strange location with a gun in his hand and a dead body, not knowing how the whole thing happened. He doesn't remember anything about the whole scenario.A man wakes up in a strange location with a gun in his hand and a dead body, not knowing how the whole thing happened. He doesn't remember anything about the whole scenario.

  • Director
    • Anthony Young
  • Writers
    • Paul Capon
    • Bill Luckwell
    • Anthony Young
  • Stars
    • Griffith Jones
    • Patricia Laffan
    • James Kenney
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.6/10
    112
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Anthony Young
    • Writers
      • Paul Capon
      • Bill Luckwell
      • Anthony Young
    • Stars
      • Griffith Jones
      • Patricia Laffan
      • James Kenney
    • 14User reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos1

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    Top cast17

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    Griffith Jones
    Griffith Jones
    • Michael Cornforth
    Patricia Laffan
    Patricia Laffan
    • Jean Gilson
    James Kenney
    James Kenney
    • Oswald Castellan
    Bruce Seton
    Bruce Seton
    • Bill Dodd
    Peter Carver
    • Wally Gizzard
    Danny Green
    Danny Green
    • Cliff Darby
    Charles Farrell
    Charles Farrell
    • Mungo Peddy
    John Moore
    John Moore
    • The Stranger
    Richard Shaw
    • Wright
    Robert Raglan
    Robert Raglan
    • Ashbury
    Maya Koumani
    • Marian Savage
    David Chivers
    • The Chemist
    Norman Wynne
    • The Innkeeper
    Frank Hawkins
    • Ben Leacock
    Jan Wilson
    • Porter
    Joe Wadham
    • Marshall
    John Watson
    • Policeman
    • Director
      • Anthony Young
    • Writers
      • Paul Capon
      • Bill Luckwell
      • Anthony Young
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews14

    5.6112
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    Featured reviews

    fillherupjacko

    Oh, Michael!

    After opening titles of sinister hypnotic music and swirling water, we're in a London apartment where Michael Cornforth, a writer, (Griffiths Jones) is making ready for bed. The next morning when he awakes he's not only fully dressed and in a completely different place in the sticks – he's also holding a gun! After a bewildered nosey round the gaff, this being a black and white second feature, he of course finds a dead body - in the kitchen. Two Rank charm school types, Jean (played by Patricia Laffan) a bossy nosey parker type certainly, a lesbian possibly – and Marian, a beautiful trance like possibly drug addicted living doll – call round on, of all things, a walking holiday. They're soaked to the skin (it is, after all ,raining) and seeking shelter. This being Britain in the 1950, Cornforth can't tell them to do one so he only goes and lets them in doesn't he. After lots of farcical trying to keep them out of the kitchen stuff while not appearing to be totally odd - and Jean informing Cornforth that her friend is "very nervy and imaginative – always expecting to find bodies under the bed" - Marian upsets the Saxa salt and one textbook scream later discovers the corpse. Not unnaturally the two girls try and bail out. Cornforth prevents this at gunpoint – and then things begin to get really silly. He wants to talk to Jean who then simply goes off with him for a nice chat while leaving Marian in the bedroom without explanation like a naughty child. Cornforth says he can prove he was in London last night as his neighbour Mungo Jerry – or Peddy – saw him. Jean then goes from "You murdered him (not Mungo) didn't you?" to "I can take care of Marian. No one believes her anyway" in the blink of an eye. Why I'm not sure. It can't be Cornforth's charisma. Later on Jean informs Cornforth that she's had Marian sent to hospital. "They've got her under heavy sedation. She'll be out for 24 hours." With friends like that?

    All in all Hidden Homicide – in terms of characterisation, plotting and probability - charters new waters of terribleness even by the standards of the British black and white 1950s B movie.
    6blanche-2

    a man wakes up in a strange home

    A novelist, Michael Cornforth (Griffin Jones) goes to bed in London and wakes up with a gun in his hand in his cousin's country cottage. Walking around, he finds his cousin in a kitchen closet.

    Two women appear at the door, soaked from the rain, asking to come in. One of the women goes into the kitchen for tea and drops something on the floor. Looking for a broom, she finds the body, screams, and faints.

    Michael attempts to explain the situation to Jean Gilson (Patricia Laffan). For some reason, she believes him. This is a major hole in the story - there is no explanation for her behavior.

    Michael's investigation, with the help of Jean and a friend, reporter Bill Dodd (Bruce Seton), puts him on the trail of his cousin's wife, who supposedly is in Australia. Since Michael is in line to inherit, and since someone is trying to frame him, this is perhaps about money.

    These B noirs were part of a quota system in British film. It's not bad; in fact, there are some fun scenes. There's a neat twist, actually a double twist, at the end.
    8clanciai

    Too many murders for any digestion

    Hitchcock would have loved this plot and would surely have made something great of it, with all its kinky sexy problems, with all this double play, with all this ghost parade of the past with an unresolved murder four years ago, and a very innocent man in the middle of it, being tucked into it and drowned in murders around him, a typical Hitchcock hero of an ordinary man being forced into intrigues which he can't understand the slightest detail of. And who would in his place? If you some time have woken up somewhere without an inkling of an idea where you are or why or how or whatever got you into this position, you will understand the case of the poor Griffith Jones and his awful predicament. Fortunately there is a rather matter-of-fact lady with a stiff upper lip to make an effort of helping him out, while his great aid in this inextricable situation is his old friend Bill Seton, a crime reporter, who seems to know exactly how to deal with a hopeless business. The plot is intricate, far-fetched, hopelessly bizarre but actually makes sense in all its crooked ways, and at least the three searchers will be relieved to finally find out that they were chasing too many ghosts while only one was real. 70 minutes is too little for a complex intrigue like this, you easily drop out and miss important details, it is too compressed for a great thriller, while more space would have provided the audience with better possibilities of reflection and understanding.
    2hitchcockthelegend

    Murder At Shinglestrand.

    Hidden Homicide is directed by Tony Young and adapted to screenplay by Young and Bill Luckwell from the novel "Murder at Shinglestrand" written by Paul Capon. It stars Griffith Jones, James Kenney and Patricia Laffan. Music is by Otto Ferrari and cinematography by Ernest Palmer.

    A novelist wakes up to find a gun in his hand a relative murdered nearby. Did he do it?

    Who cares is the serious answer after sitting through this most turgid of "Z" grade Brit crime mysteries. There's just about enough material here to have made a half hour episode of some low rent Private Investigator show, but even then the logic holes and crumbling direction would struggle to hold the attention of the intelligent of mind. Also features one of the most irritating musical scores of the 50s (shudder). 2/10
    5boblipton

    You Can't Trust Blondes

    What would you do if you woke up in a strange house, not knowing how you got there, with a pistol in your hand and your cousin's body stuffed into a cupboard? If you're Griffith Jones, you talk Patricia Laffan, who knocks on your door, and your reporter friend, Bruce Seton, into helping you hunt for the killer without informing the authorities. They get wind of it soon enough anyway, when Charles Farrell, the antiques restorer and forger across the way also turns up dead.

    It's a decently directed and telegraphically plotted murder mystery directed by Terrence Young. It's an efficiently produced second feature, with everyone running around London and the exurban areas, with a nice twist ending, and decent actors. Even so, it works out to be little more than a decent time-waster, although cinematographer Ernest Palmer -- the British one, just as it's the British Farrell in the cast -- gets some good night shooting at the end. It was the end of Palmer's career; he would light one more movie (the appropriately named THE CROWNING TOUCH) and retire. He died in 1964, age 63.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Goofs
      At the end when the Villain, disguised as Colorado Kate, confesses all he removed his long blonde wig quite easily by just pulling it off, why in that case did it not come off during his previous escape attempt by jumping into the River Thames and having a scuffle with Michael whilst in the river.
    • Quotes

      Bill Dodd: He can fake a Chippendale so even Chippendale won't know.

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 25, 1959 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Tajemnicze zabójstwo
    • Filming locations
      • Wimbledon Chase Station, Rothsay Avenue, Merton, London, England, UK(Cornforth waits outside)
    • Production company
      • Bill and Michael Luckwell Ltd.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 10 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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