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Calling Paul Temple

  • 1948
  • 1h 32m
IMDb RATING
6.0/10
300
YOUR RATING
Calling Paul Temple (1948)
CrimeMystery

A maniac is murdering the patients of a doctor who specializes in nervous disorders. A detective is called in to catch the killer.A maniac is murdering the patients of a doctor who specializes in nervous disorders. A detective is called in to catch the killer.A maniac is murdering the patients of a doctor who specializes in nervous disorders. A detective is called in to catch the killer.

  • Director
    • Maclean Rogers
  • Writers
    • Francis Durbridge
    • A.R. Rawlinson
    • Kathleen Butler
  • Stars
    • John Bentley
    • Dinah Sheridan
    • Margaretta Scott
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.0/10
    300
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Maclean Rogers
    • Writers
      • Francis Durbridge
      • A.R. Rawlinson
      • Kathleen Butler
    • Stars
      • John Bentley
      • Dinah Sheridan
      • Margaretta Scott
    • 15User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos60

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    Top cast26

    Edit
    John Bentley
    John Bentley
    • Paul Temple
    Dinah Sheridan
    Dinah Sheridan
    • Steve Temple
    Margaretta Scott
    Margaretta Scott
    • Mrs. Barbara Trevellyan
    Abraham Sofaer
    Abraham Sofaer
    • Dr. Charles Kohima
    Celia Lipton
    • Norma Rice
    Jack Raine
    Jack Raine
    • Sir Graham Forbes
    Alan Wheatley
    Alan Wheatley
    • Edward Lathom
    Hugh Pryse
    • Wilfred Davies
    John McLaren
    • Leo Brent
    Michael Golden
    • Frank Chester
    Ian McLean
    • Inspector Crane
    • (as Ian MacLean)
    Shaym Bahadur
    • Rikki
    Merle Tottenham
    Merle Tottenham
    • Millie
    Mary Midwinter
    • Carol Reagan
    Wally Patch
    • Spider Williams
    Aubrey Mallalieu
    Aubrey Mallalieu
    • Waiter at The Falcon Inn
    Hugh Miller
    Hugh Miller
    • Doctor
    Maureen Glynne
    • Ivy (Girl in Boat)
    • Director
      • Maclean Rogers
    • Writers
      • Francis Durbridge
      • A.R. Rawlinson
      • Kathleen Butler
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews15

    6.0300
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    Featured reviews

    6blanche-2

    British postwar mystery

    I'm giving this a 6 because I like British mysteries. I was not familiar with the actors, except perhaps Dinah Sheridan. I was interested to read that the lead actors all lived into their nineties. Wow.

    This film apparently is part of a series of B movies based on a radio show. Paul Temple is a dlfictiin writer of detective stories who is attempting to learn the identity of "Rex," a person who has killed several women.

    In this film nearly everyone is a suspect. The most interesting thing about the film is the trip to Canterbury, which was fascinating. I'm not sure the cast was really there, but the footage was great.

    In the end, not knowing any of the actors, I had a tough time telling the men apart. Therefore after sitting through this I don't know who Rex was. Good luck.
    5boblipton

    They Should've Called For Phillip Morris, Or Perhaps William Morris

    Paul and Steve Temple are back, even if this time they're John Bentley and Dinah Sheridan. They're helping Scotland Yard track down a blackmailer who signs his murders "Rex". This puzzles the Yard, since dead women rarely pay ransom.

    I agree with their reasoning. The trail leads to Abraham Sofaer, who's a psychiatrist and hypnotist, his suspicious-seeming secretary Margaretta Scott, who comes to Bentley for help, then seems to almost get him and Miss Sheridan blown up. Then there's..... oh, everyone, to the extent that I was growing suspicious of Shaym Bahadur, who plays their valet, Rikki. He didn't look like that in the last movie!

    The mystery aspect of this one is not as good as the last one. The red herrings get piled on in such confusion that when the bad guy was revealed, it seemed a random choice. Canterbury seems to be about three minutes by car from Scotland Yard. In addition, the movie-serial nature of this movie stuck out, including a couple of cornball cliffhangers that went out of style in the 1930s, and the sort of canned music that Universal kept in stock to be plugged in just before the the car went over the cliff and the gong sounded.

    Sigh. Well, it's Maclean Rogers directing; I'm sure that if you gave him a good budget, a good script and some real talent, he could direct a heck of a good movie. I don't think anyone ever did. This was Nettlefold Studios with Butcher's Film Service distributing, so money was tight; besides, the character was established on the radio and in the first movie, so it was likely a matter of they didn't need it good, they needed it Tuesday. At least there's some nice second-unit shot of Canterbury and some pleasant night-time shooting by Geoffrey Faithfull.
    5johnshephard-83682

    Cheerful hokum.

    Sort-of likeable ragbag of every thriller cliché imaginable about a serial killer, in which amateur sleuth Paul Temple is called in by the professional cops to more or less tell them how to do their job. It has all the usual ingredients of the type: coincidences, red herrings, witnesses who are bumped off precisely at the moment when they are saying 'the killer is ...' (you can get away with this once, perhaps, but three times??), a villain who is obvious from the start, a laughable hypnosis scene (only the hypnotist can bring the victim out of the trance, except that Temple can do it as well, by using the magic of speech!), and a final, Poirot-style gathering of every suspect still alive in a room, and a fist fight. Temple and his wife Stevie cheerfully brush off the killer's attempts to shoot them, blow them up, and drown them like it's just another day of routine events in the Temple diary. Luckily, they have a vaguely racial stereotype of a servant, complete with funny foreign accent, to assist them.

    A couple of plus points - some nice shots of 1940s Canterbury, and a night club song called Lady on the Loose, with a lyric that might have come from an Amy Winehouse song, such as 'I want a man who's true to me to the end of the night,' and 'Ladies, shut your windows, lock your doors, the man I'm after might be yours' I can't trace the song, partly written by Steve Race.
    6CinemaSerf

    Calling Paul Temple

    Like many films based on radio plays; the writing tends to forget we also have images to process too and so they run a bit to language. This gentle detective murder-mystery falls into that trap and the wordy dialogue robs the thing of pace somewhat. That said, John Bentley and Dinah Sheridan deliver engaging, cheery performances as they are brought in by Scotland Yard to assist in the search for "Rex" - a mysterious blackmailer/murderer who is preying on women. Features some eerily lit scenes in Canterbury which add significantly to the tenseness of the drama with some hypnotism and fisticuffs at the end.
    7langmike29

    Brisk British thriller,

    First of four B films adapted from very popular radio programmes of the 40s and 50s Highly enjoyable for fans of old fashioned mysteries. Nice location work in Canterbury though matte shots from cars involving rolling scenery date it. Leads both good including Sheridan who would move onto A films including the wonderful "Genervive"

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Based on the BBC Radio serial "Send For Paul Temple Again" (broadcast over September to November 1945) by Francis Durbridge, which was novelised by the author in 1948 and later remade for radio as "Paul Temple and the Alex Affair" (February to March 1968). This was the final BBC Radio Temple serial until Radio 4's run of remakes began in 2006, and saw the killer's name (minimally) changed from Rex to Alex.
    • Goofs
      The literate Temples quote from Richard Lovelace's 1642 poem "To Althea, from Prison" ("Stone walls do not a prison make,/Nor iron bars a cage"). He is, however, believed to have written it whilst at Westminster's Gatehouse Prison, not Canterbury.
    • Quotes

      Paul Temple: Gosh, I must get dressed. We shall be late for lunch!

    • Connections
      Followed by Paul Temple's Triumph (1950)
    • Soundtracks
      What's Cookin' in Cabaret
      by Steve Race & Bunti Race (as Steve & Bunti Race)

      Performed by Celia Lipton (uncredited)

      Accompanied by Steve Race (piano) (uncredited)

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    FAQ

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 13, 1948 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Wer ist Rex?
    • Filming locations
      • Nettlefold Studios, Walton-on-Thames, Surrey, England, UK(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Nettlefold Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 32 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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