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Fear No More

  • 1961
  • 1h 20m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
437
YOUR RATING
Fear No More (1961)
DramaMysteryThriller

A woman recently released from psychiatric care is accused of the murder of a woman found dead in her compartment. Arrested and taken off the train, she escapes custody and flees to her apar... Read allA woman recently released from psychiatric care is accused of the murder of a woman found dead in her compartment. Arrested and taken off the train, she escapes custody and flees to her apartment, where she finds another murder victim.A woman recently released from psychiatric care is accused of the murder of a woman found dead in her compartment. Arrested and taken off the train, she escapes custody and flees to her apartment, where she finds another murder victim.

  • Director
    • Bernard Wiesen
  • Writer
    • Leslie Edgley
  • Stars
    • Mala Powers
    • Jacques Bergerac
    • John Harding
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    437
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Bernard Wiesen
    • Writer
      • Leslie Edgley
    • Stars
      • Mala Powers
      • Jacques Bergerac
      • John Harding
    • 28User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos9

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    Top cast12

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    Mala Powers
    Mala Powers
    • Sharon Carlin
    Jacques Bergerac
    Jacques Bergerac
    • Paul Colbert
    John Harding
    • Milo Seymour
    Helena Nash
    • Irene Maddox
    John Baer
    John Baer
    • Keith Burgess
    Anna Lee Carroll
    Anna Lee Carroll
    • Denise Colbert
    • (as Ann Carroll)
    Robert Karnes
    Robert Karnes
    • Joe Brady
    Peter Brocco
    Peter Brocco
    • Steve Cresca
    Peter Virgo Jr.
    • Duke Maddox
    • (as Peter Virgo)
    Gregory Irvin
    • Chris Colbert
    Emile Hamaty
    • Train Conductor
    Gilbert Brady
    • Teenager who plays jukebox
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Bernard Wiesen
    • Writer
      • Leslie Edgley
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews28

    6.3437
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    Featured reviews

    5Prismark10

    Fear No More

    Fear No More is a Hitchcock lite low budget noirish conspiracy thriller. It was the only film made by director Bernard Wiesen. The rest of his output was television shows.

    Sharon (Mala Powers) is a secretary taken to the train for a business trip to San Francisco by her employer's chauffeur. He puts her on the train and gives her an envelope for an errand.

    In the compartment she finds a stranger and a dead woman. She is knocked out and when she regains consciousness. A cop accuses her of murder. Sharon manages to escape from the cop.

    She is almost run down by Paul (Jacques Bergerac) a Frenchman taking his son back to his ex wife Denise. Paul gives Sharon a lift to her Los Angeles apartment where she lives with Keith.

    Only when she returns to the apartment after going out for a drink with Paul. Keith is dead and the same killer from the train pursues her.

    It transpires that Sharon had a mental breakdown. Maybe she is mad or paranoid. Her employer Milo Seymour tells a different story. Sharon was not sent on a business trip and stole $3000 from his safe which is in her envelope.

    Not only that, the dead woman from her train compartment walks in. She is alive and well and claims to be Milo's wife.

    Despite the low budget, there are a lot of twists as it seems Milo has elaborate plans of his own. The ending does get very hysterical and melodramatic which is a bit of a let down.
    7soren-71259

    A Mala Powers tour de force

    Sometimes one runs across an Academy Award level performance in a B film and the performance doesn't get the attention it should have. Mala Powers was a remarkably talented actress who rarely got to show off what she was capable of doing, being used largely as decoration in things like fifties horror movies because, alas, she was quite attractive and in those days of Piper Laurie, Lori Nelson, et cetera, young attractive ladies were often cast in slop. But in this highly watchable effort Mala Powers gives what amounts to a complete acting class as she pours her heart into this stunning performance which has to be watched several times to be fully appreciated. Ms. Powers taught the Michael Chekhov school or style of acting professionally for many years but she could certainly show her students this work as evidence that she knew what she was talking about. In this acting theory, the Chekhov-influenced actor attempts to indicate through gestures a reflection of the interior or psychic anguish that is being felt. Movements and gestures must be true and effective and lively but not forced and inappropriate or unnecessarily exaggerated. If you just take isolated scenes and you know the plot, you can watch her emotional display and her gesturing and how organic and integrated they are. There are no false moves, no exaggerated gestures and no grandstanding. Ably supported by Jacques Bergerac as a troubled man who seems to find highly troubled women to court without even trying, Mala Powers keeps us wondering about her sanity until the rather feeble and highly implausible ending moments but it's well worth a watch for people who like to curl up and watch a pretty good mystery thriller with one performance that goes way beyond what one would expect and which shows the post-Slanislavski school (Slanikovsky was Chekhov's teacher) in all its raging glory. It's a must-see for serious acting students. I hope this review does not sound too artsy for the viewer-- it's one of the gutsiest performances in a film that I've seen!
    6boblipton

    Miss Powers and I Didn't Know What Was Going On

    Mala Powers is sent on a business trip by her employer, John Harding. When she gets to her train compartment, there's a man with a gun, and a dead woman. After she fails to convince him that she is not whoever he is looking for, he knocks her out. A cop wakes her, and prepares to take her to jail. However, Miss Powers escapes and hitches a ride with Jacques Bergerac and his son back to Los Angeles. After Bergerac drops his son off with his ex-wife (with many recriminations), he returns to Miss Powers and tries to find out what's bothering her. She evades his questions, and finds her old boyfriend, whom she was letting stay in her apartment while she was gone, dead.

    It's a story that grows more and more dire as secrets are revealed, things she remembers not being where she left them -- including the ex-boyfriend -- until her resolve crumbles and she falls into a paranoid rant.

    It's a pretty good movie up until that point, with the audience beginning to question the evidence of their own eyes. One of the IMDb reviewers calls it "Hitchcock on a budget" and that's not a bad description if you ignore the lack of visual flair. The result is an intriguing movie .... at least until the denouement, which is a bit of a disappointment.
    6udar55

    A few nice twists offer a way to spend the evening

    Secretary Sharon Carlin (Mala Powers) heads from Los Angeles to San Francisco via train on a business trip. Things go bad the moment the train leaves the station as she is met in her cabin by a dead woman and a man with a gun, who knocks her unconscious. She is woken up by a cop who tells her the body has been moved and she is being charged with murder. She jumps off the train and soon runs into good Samaritan Paul Colbert (Jacques Bergerac). He initially believes her story, but then begins to have doubts when she reveals she spent time in a mental institution for murder. This 77-minute picture moves at a fast pace and has some nice twists in it. Viewers will actually start to doubt Sharon's story and her paranoia is well established. Not a classic, but worth watching once if just for the scene where Colbert's son cracks his forehead on the dashboard in a near crash.
    7melvelvit-1

    Not half-bad if you don't examine it too closely

    Mala Powers mistakenly thinks she can FEAR NO MORE when Good Samaritan Jacques Bergerac finds her lying in the middle of the road after she escapes the policeman who arrested her for the murder of a woman on a train. He takes her to her place where there's another dead body and the couple get an even bigger surprise when they go to her employer's house and find the cop and the "murdered" woman there, insisting she's insane. Jacques doesn't know what to think when he's told Mala is also an escapee from a mental institution after having killed her previous employer. WTF?

    Jacques Bergerac, handsome star of stage, screen, and tabloid scandal, was like a suave, Gallic version of Mike Henry whose thick French accent made him hard to understand half the time but it never mattered much since he was usually just eye candy anyway. As luck would have it, Jacques is called upon to react instead of act in this "twisty mystery" that's not half bad if you don't examine it too closely and, in its defense, you don't get the chance. Bottom line: it's a fast-moving B- movie held together by Mala Powers, a pretty good little actress, something I never noticed before.

    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (1974)
    Mystery
    Cho Yeo-jeong in Parasite (2019)
    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Gilbert Brady's last film.
    • Quotes

      Sharon Carlin: [discovering a body in her train compartment, at the barrel of the gun of an intruder] She's dead!

      Duke Maddox: Is that so? So why did you have to go and kill her?

      [knocks her cold with butt of the gun]

    • Connections
      Referenced in Rewind This! (2013)

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    FAQ12

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 1, 1963 (Mexico)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Streaming on "Attachment Theory Video" YouTube Channel
      • Streaming on "Broken Trout" YouTube Channel
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Pánico en la noche
    • Filming locations
      • Republic Studios - 4024 Radford Avenue, North Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Scaramouche Productions Inc. (I)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 20m(80 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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