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Straight on Till Morning

  • 1972
  • R
  • 1h 36m
IMDb RATING
5.7/10
1.6K
YOUR RATING
Straight on Till Morning (1972)
A love story about an innocent girl thrown into the big city in this murderous trailer
Play trailer3:15
1 Video
32 Photos
Thriller

A timid, withdrawn woman meets a man she believes is finally the love of her life, unaware that he is a vicious serial killer.A timid, withdrawn woman meets a man she believes is finally the love of her life, unaware that he is a vicious serial killer.A timid, withdrawn woman meets a man she believes is finally the love of her life, unaware that he is a vicious serial killer.

  • Director
    • Peter Collinson
  • Writer
    • John Peacock
  • Stars
    • Rita Tushingham
    • Shane Briant
    • James Bolam
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.7/10
    1.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Peter Collinson
    • Writer
      • John Peacock
    • Stars
      • Rita Tushingham
      • Shane Briant
      • James Bolam
    • 32User reviews
    • 28Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Straight On 'Till Morning
    Trailer 3:15
    Straight On 'Till Morning

    Photos32

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    Top cast16

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    Rita Tushingham
    Rita Tushingham
    • Brenda Thompson
    Shane Briant
    Shane Briant
    • Peter Clive
    James Bolam
    James Bolam
    • Joey
    Katya Wyeth
    • Caroline
    Annie Ross
    Annie Ross
    • Liza
    Tom Bell
    Tom Bell
    • Jimmy Lindsay
    Clare Kelly
    Clare Kelly
    • Margo Thompson
    Harold Berens
    • Mr. Harris
    John Clive
    John Clive
    • Newsagent
    Tommy Godfrey
    • Mr. Godfrey
    Mavis Villiers
    Mavis Villiers
    • Indian Princess
    Lola Willard
    • Customer
    Tinker
    • Tinker
    Paul Brooke
    Paul Brooke
    • Uneasy Man
    • (uncredited)
    Mike Mungarvan
    Mike Mungarvan
    • Mr. Harris's Client
    • (uncredited)
    Guy Standeven
    Guy Standeven
    • Man on Park Bench
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Peter Collinson
    • Writer
      • John Peacock
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews32

    5.71.5K
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    Featured reviews

    7richardwworkman

    Lucid NIghtmare.

    This is not your usual Hammer House film.

    The Brenda character is perhaps one of the strangest in cinema. She's desperately naive to the point of delusion. Los in her own fantasy world of fairytale endings she struggles to engage in the realy of her new life in London. The dog kidnapping scene where Brenda transform into a fairytale character of her own creation is a perfect example of this.

    The weirdness and disconnectedness of the characters of swinging early 70's party scene reflects the lucid dream like quality of the film. The film occasionally jumps to alternative scenes, sexual, ordinary, her mother back home, they all suggest that Brenda's decisions could have led her down a different path.

    When it seems that Brenda's bizarre plan to find a husband is starting to pay off, she stumbles into another person's fairytale. Peter offers Brenda what she wants but in exchange he takes her personality, renaming her as a character in his own delusional fantasy.

    What follows is a superbly sinister and uneasy relationship. The tension between Peter and Brenda moves between a kind of marriage of convenience, dark sexuality and childish fantasy.

    A brilliant example of 70's British horror. Well worth a watch.
    8christopher-underwood

    moody stuff around the then recently completed South Bank complex

    The swinging sixties are coming to an end in swinging London but there are still some hang overs from the 1950s and still plenty of odd ball characters. Pregnancy outside of marriage was still much looked down upon and under the guise of the 'flower children' it was perfectly possible for even homicidal maniacs to not seem out of place. Rita Tushingham is as great as ever and this much under rated actress puts in one of her more endearing performances. Shane Briant is eerily convincing as the psycho and the rest of the cast including James Bolam are all fine. Some decent location shooting is always appreciated around this time and here we get a couple of boutiques and some very moody stuff around the then recently completed South Bank complex. Plenty of surprises and well worth catching as one of the most unusual hammer movies.
    7The_Void

    Not your usual Hammer - but a decent change of pace!

    If, like me, you like your Hammer films to feature vampires and things that go bump in the night, you're likely to be disappointed with this film. After the first few minutes, I wasn't expecting Straight on Till Morning to be any good, but things do pick up; and once they do, the film does become interesting and represents a more than decent seventies offering, even if it isn't what we've all come to expect from Hammer studios. The film is set and shot in London and features a typically British seventies style, as the fashions and set design are very true to the period. The film plays out more like films such as 10 Rillington Place than your average Hammer Horror fare, and focuses on Brenda; a shy, irritating and naive girl who goes to live in London after telling her mother that she's pregnant. She moves in with the pretty Caroline, but begins to feel lonely and while out walking one night, spots a dog that she decides to kidnap. Upon returning the dog to her owner, the rather odd looking Peter, and telling him why she did it; he asks her to move in and she accepts. However, she doesn't realise that her new housemate is actually a vicious psychopath...

    Straight on Till Morning isn't particularly violent or bloody, but that isn't to say that the film isn't disturbing. Most of the film's nastiness is implied, and while I wouldn't have minded seeing Shane Briant's silly hairstyle psycho going on the rampage with a Stanley knife, the way that director Peter Collinson ('Fright', 'The Italian Job') goes about implementing these scenes does give the film more of a poignant edge. The lead role goes to Liverpudlian actress Rita Tushingham, and for me she's just a bit too irritating. She fits the film perfectly by the way she looks and acts, but I found it very difficult to care about what happens to her due to the fact that I had to cringe during her every scene. Shane Briant is the other side of the offbeat central duo, and the most memorable thing about his appearance in the film is his haircut - which is ridiculous to say the least! This does, however, make his role all the more intriguing...as I never thought that someone who looks so silly would be capable of murder! The ending is a bit forced, but its fun enough getting there; the atmosphere is claustrophobic and the relationship between the leads is never boring. Overall this isn't a great Hammer film - but it's a different one and I enjoyed it.
    7Coventry

    We're off to crazy, uncanny, disturbing Neverland!

    Just a couple of days ago, I narrated the Peter Pan fairytale to my five-year-old son before bedtime. Luckily I read him the sane and harmless Disney version, because this mentally depraved cult variation probably would have messed up his innocent little mind beyond repair… Just like his daddy's, yikes! We all know and worship the Hammer Studios for the outrageously vicious Grand Guignol horror movies they unleashed, but many people remain unaware that Hammer also produced several mysterious and experimental psycho-thrillers that don't feature their big stars, Victorian castle settings or entire buckets full of gore & bloodshed. The vast majority of these titles sadly ended up in obscurity, and that's a damn shame because most often these are extremely suspenseful, original and unorthodox thriller and/or film-noir beauties. "Straight on till Morning" is a terrific example of an atypical Hammer movie that nevertheless turned out to be a fascinating surprise and truly one of the most morbidly disturbing thrillers that I've seen in a very long time. It has to be said that the brief plot description here on the website is rather misleading. It says: "A timid, withdrawn woman meets a man she believes is finally the love of her life, unaware that he is a vicious serial killer". It makes you believe that this is a typical damsel-in-distress story, but the timid and withdrawn woman in question is actually quite troubled herself. Brenda Thompson lives with her meddlesome mother in Liverpool, but she dreams about meeting a handsome husband like the ones she describes in her self-written children's fairy tales. Brenda tells her mother that she's pregnant and heads off to London to find a father for her inexistent baby. In the swinging capital she tries hard to meet guys, but she's too obtrusive and desperate and it certainly also doesn't help that her much sexier roommate Caroline dives into bed with all of Brenda's potential boyfriends. One night Brenda kidnaps the hunky Peter's dog Tinkel, only to be able to bring him back the next day and properly makes his acquaintance. Peter knows what she did, but still offers Brenda to move into his house and live with him. He does insist that she changes her name to Wendy, and through previous flashbacks we also learned that he's a bit of a murderous psychopath.

    Admittedly the first half hour of "Straight on till Morning" is dull, confusing and very hard to struggle through. There's far too much experimental editing going on and the script extendedly introduces too many characters that aren't really relevant. However, if you manage to sit through this, you'll be rewarded with an otherwise uniquely twisted thriller, full of dark themes, misogynist undertones and so-called "kitchen sink" trademarks. There are several uncanny references towards the Peter Pan story (the names and the title, but little plot details as well) and the eventual explanation of why our hunky protagonist is killing is incredibly vile and disturbing. On a side note, it actually also reminded me of the excellent Nick Cave song "Where the Wild Roses Grow". The climax is literally breathtaking and hugely depressing. The film is undeniably a prototypic "life in London during the early 70's" product, illustrated through a cast full of bleak and unsympathetic characters and hideous clothes & hairstyles. Rita Tushingham gives a stellar performance, which I figure wasn't easy since she's supposed to be unattractive, naive and pitiable. Shane Briant is excellent as well, with a performance that is simultaneously menacing and miserable. And supportive babe Katya Wyeth, well… she's simply one of the most ravishing girls I've ever seen. Peter Collinson, who died way too young, did a great job as the director, although he should have cut some scenes towards the beginning.
    7tim-764-291856

    Hammer Horror meets Kitchen Sink,

    When this was up on The Horror Channel, it was Rita Tushingham's name that caught my eye, her brilliant acting and intensity laying down an intriguing gauntlet.

    With Radio Times not even giving a review, or even a rating, I was worried that it might be dreadful and true, many could see some parts as such, especially if they had taken them out of context and not watched it all the way through. However, from its opening, it was obvious that this was a well-made and directed (by Peter Collinson) little movie.

    Not only is it a good and interesting snapshot of swinging London, it is also a warped fairytale about a reclusive serial killer. Who's the beauty and who is the beast? Should we and can we be loved for beauty alone?

    Describing the story is unnecessary; it is a shortish film and it's the issues involved, often psychological and deeply sinister plus the often imaginative directing that are the pluses. The acting of the leads Tushingham and Shane Briant are very good with just the right amount of every emotion going. The popular James Bolam also co-stars.

    There is often a sense of unease, even during the less intense parts. Oddness also often takes a lead but never enough for us to dismiss them. The most intense, X-Rated (still certificate 18) scenes are disturbing rather than graphic but they still shock.

    Unlike many Hammer Horror's, it remains memorable, the ordinariness mixing with the oddness plus the central characters making for an unusual and compelling mix. I enjoyed it.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The title is a quotation from J.M. Barrie's "Peter Pan": Peter tells Wendy that Never Neverland is "second star to the right, and straight on till morning."
    • Goofs
      When Peter leads Brenda/'Wendy' into her room for the first time, a crew member is clearly visible, crouching down from the doorway.
    • Quotes

      Brenda Thompson: I came to... I came to ask you... You'll think I'm silly, I know you will, but I came to ask you if...

      [tearfully:]

      Brenda Thompson: if you'd give me a baby. I just want a baby, that's all.

    • Alternate versions
      The BBFC cut the film in 1972 for an X rating.
    • Connections
      Featured in Les Archives de la Hammer: Chiller (1994)
    • Soundtracks
      Straight On Till Morning
      Music by Annie Ross

      Lyrics by Annie Ross and John Peacock

      Sung by Annie Ross

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    FAQ13

    • How long is Straight on Till Morning?Powered by Alexa

    Details

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    • Release date
      • July 9, 1972 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Dressed for Death
    • Filming locations
      • South Bank Centre, South Bank, Lambeth, London, England, UK
    • Production company
      • Hammer Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 36 minutes
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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