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L'auberge des tueurs

Original title: Send for Paul Temple
  • 1946
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 23m
IMDb RATING
5.7/10
200
YOUR RATING
L'auberge des tueurs (1946)
Film NoirCrime

Novelist and amateur sleuth, Paul Temple, meets a newspaper woman called "Steve." Together they investigate a gang of diamond robbers.Novelist and amateur sleuth, Paul Temple, meets a newspaper woman called "Steve." Together they investigate a gang of diamond robbers.Novelist and amateur sleuth, Paul Temple, meets a newspaper woman called "Steve." Together they investigate a gang of diamond robbers.

  • Director
    • John Argyle
  • Writers
    • Francis Durbridge
    • John Argyle
  • Stars
    • Anthony Hulme
    • Joy Shelton
    • Tamara Desni
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.7/10
    200
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • John Argyle
    • Writers
      • Francis Durbridge
      • John Argyle
    • Stars
      • Anthony Hulme
      • Joy Shelton
      • Tamara Desni
    • 11User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos57

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    Top cast23

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    Anthony Hulme
    • Paul Temple
    Joy Shelton
    • Steve Trent
    Tamara Desni
    Tamara Desni
    • Diana Thornley
    Jack Raine
    Jack Raine
    • Sir Graham Forbes
    Beatrice Varley
    Beatrice Varley
    • Miss Marchment
    Hylton Allen
    • Doctor Milton
    Maire O'Neill
    Maire O'Neill
    • Mrs. Neddy
    Michael Golden
    • Dixie
    Richard Shayne
    • Chief Inspector Dale
    Edward V. Robson
    • Inspector Merritt
    Philip Ray
    Philip Ray
    • Horace Daley
    • (as Phil Ray)
    Leslie Weston
    • Skid Tyler
    Olive Sloane
    Olive Sloane
    • Ruby
    H Victor Weske
    • Snow Williams
    • (as H. Victor Weske)
    Norman Pierce
    Norman Pierce
    • Sergeant Morrison
    Melville Crawford
    • Chief Inspector Harvey
    Charles Wade
    • Rikki
    John Adams
    • Detective at Briefing
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • John Argyle
    • Writers
      • Francis Durbridge
      • John Argyle
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews11

    5.7200
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    Featured reviews

    6boblipton

    A Good Mystery Yarn

    Anthony Hulme is Paul Temple, a mystery writer and occasional consultant for the police. When one of them shows up for help with a string of smash-and-grab jewelry robberies, he winds up dead, in an apparent suicide. Later, when newspaperwoman Joy Shelton shows up for an interview, she turns out to be the dead man's sister. They begin to cooperate on the case.

    It's an inexpensively produced movie version of the BBC show that ran for about three decades, and a fair mystery; not only does the audience get clues as soon as the hero, sometimes they are offered before he gets them; this adds a tension to the proceedings, as the audience -- I anyway -- began to wonder if he would ever catch the bad guy.

    The movie was produced by Butcher's Film Service at their Nettleton studio. The firm was founded by William Butcher, a Blackheath chemist in the first decade of the 20th century, in an era when they did film developing and often had a sideline in equipment. They were distributing films by 1909, mostly to northern England. Butcher's was never a classy firm; their typical directors, by the 1940s, included Maclean Rogers and Francis Searle, and their biggest stars were Arthur Lucan as Old Mother Riley, and Frank Randle. However, they also distributed movies by Cecil Hepworth, Maurice Elvey, and Walter Forde. They survived as a production company well into the 1960s, and were still distributing movies in the 1980s. That's quite a length of time in the turbulent industry.
    6CinemaSerf

    Send for Paul Temple

    Looking at the style of this production, you wouldn't really have to guess it was based on characters originally created for the wireless. The production is very precise, static almost as we witness the eponymous amateur sleuth (Anthony Hulme) try to get to the bottom of some diamond thievery and of the mysterious death of a police constable working on these heists. Along the way he enlists the help of the dead man's girlfriend - a journalist who uses the moniker "Steve" (Joy Shelton) and pretty soon they are embroiled in a clever and dangerous plot hiding in plain sight. What does make this work is the writing - the story requires us to engage our own grey cells a bit if we are to get any satisfaction from the otherwise rather pedestrian presentation. We are given some clues, some red herrings and the actors sort of act as guides as we try to solve the mystery for ourselves. I reckon this would have worked just as well on the radio, but on film it is an enjoyable enough mystery that over-stretches a bit long - at eighty minutes - but is still worth a watch.
    3Prismark10

    Send for Paul Temple

    There is a good story here but it makes for such an unexciting and times clunky old fashioned film.

    Chief Inspector Gerald Harvey visits mystery novelist Paul Temple (Anthony Hulme) at his country mansion. He wants Temple's help over a spate of jewellery robberies. The gang are not afraid to kill. At the nearby local pub where Temple drops him off, Harvey supposedly shoots himself suddenly. The landlord tells Temple it is suicide and this is confirmed by the local doctor. Temple has doubts.

    Temple hooks up with journalist Steve, it was her brother that was killed. The gang carried out similar style of robberies in South Africa. It seems the same gang has come over to Britain.

    Then there is the meek Amelia Marchment who is studying the history of English inns who seems to know something about the gang as well.

    Based on the Francis Durbridge radio thriller. There is a kernel of a decent mystery here with a criminal mastermind behind it all and lots of double crossings. However the film is too low budget, Hulme is too plain and the film production company just cannot realise this as an effective thriller.
    Mozjoukine

    Routine British detective movie.

    The attempt to turn radio's Paul Temple into a movie series had limited success.

    This film is uneven and all the information is carried in its radio writer dialog. The cast are undistinguished but production values get by. They even have a go at a staged in the studio Ram Raid, which is a whole lot better than their toy car bridge crash. Pacing is surprisingly quite lively.

    The characters can be divided into regulars, including an unfunny "yellow face" comic butler, and suspects. The stamp of the pre-war Edgar Wallace thrillers is firmly upon it all, without the film reaching even their modest levels of interest.

    With its eye firmly on the Empire quota, it's so stodgily British as to numb an audience into wondering what the Big Picture in the program will be like. Our suit and tie wearing, BBC accented hero was never going to be a threat to Charly Chan and Michael Shayne.
    8clanciai

    Jewel thieves advancing to murder plots

    Paul Temple was the great radio detective of the 40s and 50s, immensely popular all round the world, where people everywhere sat glued to their radios to listen to the next chapter of some dreadfully exciting mystery of murders and deceptions and atrocious robberies demanding the extraordinary help of Paul Temple to get things sorted out. All the necessary ingredients are found here to make up a real Paul Temple affair, the strange unexplainable murders, the woman in distress, the ruthless killers, masked as proper citizens, and a tremendously intricate mystery plot with a complicated background of a history abroad, almost like a Sherlock Holmes elaborate novel. The style of Francis Durbridge is smooth and stylish, he has a certain elegance of writing and concocting his plots which you don't find neither in Edgar Wallace, Leslie Charters, Agatha Christie, Ian Fleming or any of the others, and his plots are always a challenge to your intelligence - Paul Temple is smarter and cooler than you would ever be, and he always solves his case. The actors here are no aces, there is no cinematography, the direction is efficient but gives no room for any depth of character or psychology, the absence of any Hitchcock quality is blatant, so the whole film depends entirely on the script. Fortunately this is sufficient, and his mysteries would deserve some revival, especially today when the criminal genre is completely drowned in atrocious superficiality of only violence and sex.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Based on the BBC Radio serial "Send For Paul Temple" (broadcast over April to May 1938) by Francis Durbridge, which was novelized by the author later in '38 and remade/abridged for radio in 1941. The story was the first in the three decade-long run of Temple adventures by Durbridge.
    • Connections
      Followed by Calling Paul Temple (1948)

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    FAQ13

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 12, 1947 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Mystery of the Green Finger
    • Filming locations
      • Nettlefold Studios, Walton-on-Thames, Surrey, England, UK(studio: made at Nettlefold Studios Walton-On-Thames England)
    • Production company
      • Butcher's Film Service
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 23 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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