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Chantage à Soho

Original title: The Shakedown
  • 1960
  • 16
  • 1h 32m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
370
YOUR RATING
Chantage à Soho (1960)
CrimeDrama

A former pimp, released from prison, disregards his ex-cellmate's advice and reverts to criminal activities, this time involving a photographic model racket.A former pimp, released from prison, disregards his ex-cellmate's advice and reverts to criminal activities, this time involving a photographic model racket.A former pimp, released from prison, disregards his ex-cellmate's advice and reverts to criminal activities, this time involving a photographic model racket.

  • Director
    • John Lemont
  • Writers
    • Leigh Vance
    • John Lemont
  • Stars
    • Terence Morgan
    • Hazel Court
    • Donald Pleasence
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    370
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • John Lemont
    • Writers
      • Leigh Vance
      • John Lemont
    • Stars
      • Terence Morgan
      • Hazel Court
      • Donald Pleasence
    • 17User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos9

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    Top cast41

    Edit
    Terence Morgan
    Terence Morgan
    • Augie Cortona
    Hazel Court
    Hazel Court
    • Mildred Eyde
    Donald Pleasence
    Donald Pleasence
    • Jessel
    Bill Owen
    Bill Owen
    • Spettigue
    Robert Beatty
    Robert Beatty
    • Jarvis
    Harry H. Corbett
    Harry H. Corbett
    • Gollar
    Gene Anderson
    • Zena
    Eddie Byrne
    Eddie Byrne
    • George - Barman
    John Salew
    John Salew
    • Arnold
    Georgina Cookson
    Georgina Cookson
    • Miss Firbank
    Joan Haythorne
    Joan Haythorne
    • Miss Ogilvie
    Sheila Buxton
    • Nadia
    Dorinda Stevens
    Dorinda Stevens
    • Grace
    Jack Lambert
    Jack Lambert
    • Sgt. Kershaw
    Larry Burns
    • 1st Thug
    Larry Taylor
    Larry Taylor
    • 2nd Thug
    • (as Laurence Taylor)
    Jack Taylor
    • 3rd Thug
    Charles Lamb
    • Pinza
    • Director
      • John Lemont
    • Writers
      • Leigh Vance
      • John Lemont
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews17

    6.7370
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    Featured reviews

    6boblipton

    Morgan Is Very Good

    Terence Morgan is released from prison. He can't go back to running street walkers; that racket has been taken over by another hood. He meets up with down-on-his-luck photographer Donald Pleasence and decides on a new racket, which he finishes by hitting the guy who took over his racket. On the surface, it's a fashion photography studio run by Pleasence, with a modeling agency and school; the real money is from letting people take 'art studies' of nude women.... and blackmailing them. It's nice while it lasts, but how long before the cops and underworld take notice?

    Morgan is pretty good as the tough man with a few soft spots, including Pleasance and modeling student Hazel Court. It's an interesting mix of crime and character study. Philip Green's jazz score Is pretty good, but it becomes repetitious, particularly when it's woven into a nightclub score.
    7malcolmgsw

    the songwriter must have had a nervous breakdown

    So far nobody has commented on the truly hilarious title song which is sung in a club scene and over the credits at the end.Films of that era used to like to have a title song as a tie in.The lyrics of this are brief but memorable.The poor songwriter could only come up with "slakedown" and "askdown" as rhymes for shakedown.it has to be heard to be believed.The film itself is a very enjoyable example of a British 1950s gangster film.Mind you poor old Harry H Corbett doesn't look as if he could kill Sooty let alone Terence Morgan.His accent varies tremendously starting off as mid Atlantic.Donald Pleasance gives an inspired performance as a seedy photographer.However as to the blackmail racket,would it have been possible to blackmail someone for taking photos of a nude model.After all married men went to the still open Windmill Theatre and nobody blackmailed them.A bit quaint really,however a very entertaining film nonetheless.Plaudits to distributor Renknown for such a fine print.
    7mmipyle

    Ten minutes too long, but really good otherwise! "Shakedown", the song, is a hoot, though it's not supposed to be...

    "The Shakedown" (1960) is an excellent British crime drama starring Terence Morgan, Hazel Court, Donald Pleasence, Bill Owen, Robert Beatty, Harry H. Corbett, Gene Anderson, and many other fine lesser Brit character actors of the day, including Jackie Collins, Georgina Cookson, and Eddie Byrne. Loaded with talent, this well written and tautly directed show (less well-edited) reminds us that the Brits at the turn of the 60s were turning out well-crafted crime dramas for the masses that have stood the test of time very well. Now, there are a couple of idiosyncratic things about this one. First of all, the sort of jazzy, nearly rock'n'roll underlying score is very 50s - very. It's not bad at all, just a tad loud in a few places. Secondly, the title becomes a song in the middle of the proceedings. The singer is excellent - truly excellent; even the music is decent. But the song: the rhyming that goes on with "shakedown" is out and out ludicrous! Everything from slakedown and takedown to...you get the drift. It wouldn't have been so bad if only a rhyme or two was used, but this one was written by poet whose automatic writing was based on communication with a rhyming dictionary on Mars, and the rhyme with "shakedown" went on and on and on, and the rhymes began to be laughable. What was amazing was that the song was well done by the singer and the tune was done very seriously. Other than the song and the fact that the film should have been edited down from the 92 minutes to about 80, this was really good. Morgan gets out of prison from a prostitution racket charge which he's served three years for, and now he gets into a blackmail racket, and also plans to get revenge on the man who took over his old racket. The blackmail racket is done by using a modeling front, a semi-legitimate one, combined with a professional photographer's studio, getting males to come in and have them caught with semi-nude and nude models in their photographs. Then the photos are used as bait for cash. This leads to some very interesting plot points, including a fine ending - which - you'll have to watch to find out what it is...
    8Colin_Sibthorpe_II

    Serious and credible

    As well as being an entertaining picture, this is a realistic examination of crime and criminals. The descent of the photographer, essentially a decent enough man, into crime, and his staying with it even when offered an out, is very well handled.

    We see there are three main things keeping crime in check. The police of course, but also pushing victims until they crack and are no longer rational and predictable, and rivalries among the insanely greedy and self-centered people we call criminals.

    My TV guide gave this a very lukewarm review and I nearly didn't bother with it, but I'm glad I did.
    8Leofwine_draca

    Very good British crime film

    THE SHAKEDOWN is a fine British thriller and one of the best B-movie crime films I've seen from the era. It's a film blessed with a strong cast of familiar faces and an interesting, atypical storyline that's much, much more than your usual detective-pursues-robbers type tale from this era. The action is centred in and around a photography studio, where an ex-con has apparently gone straight after serving a long jail term. However, the studio is a front for something much more sinister, and the police are baffled on how to proceed.

    The underrated star Terence Morgan (CURSE OF THE MUMMY'S TOMB) takes the main protagonist lead as a character you love to hate. Certainly he has much more depth of character than is usual for a stock villain in these films, and you even end up admiring his bravado at some points. The rest of the (excellent) cast includes the lovely Hazel Court as a top model, Bill Owen as a ne'er-do-well, Robert Beatty as the detective, Donald Pleasence as an alcoholic photographer, Eddie Byrne as a barman, Gene Anderson as a gangster's moll, Harry H. Corbett as a criminal, Paul Whitsun-Jones as a boozer, Edward Judd as a barber, and the likes of Angela Douglas and Jackie Collins as young models. That cast alone is rather incredible.

    The cherry on top is really the quality of the script, by director John Lemont (of KONGA infamy) and Leigh Vance (WITNESS IN THE DARK). It twists and turns all over the place and even if you have some idea of what the ending is going to be, you've never quite sure what's going to take place along the way. The sequence in which Morgan robs his former accomplices is my favourite moment and a real highlight in an undeservedly forgotten minor film.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Jackie Collins was so tired of being referred to as "Joan Collins sister" that she used the name "Lynn Curtis" for this movie.
    • Connections
      Referenced in Piccadilly Third Stop (1960)
    • Soundtracks
      Shakedown
      (uncredited)

      Written by Philip Green

      Sung by Sheila Buxton

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 20, 1961 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Shakedown
    • Filming locations
      • Alliance Film Studios, St Margarets, Twickenham, Middlesex, England, UK(studio: made at Twickenham Studios, London, England.)
    • Production companies
      • Alliance Film Distributors Limited
      • Ethiro-Alliance
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 32 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White

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    Chantage à Soho (1960)
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