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Brief Synopsis
but she insists on going rowing instead, and refuses to disclose any information about the case. Upon returning home, Elizabeth sees her uncle furtively hang up the phone. After she mentions that Halloran suspects that Molly's killer may be insane, Fenner abruptly drives off to the Crowley house. There, Fenner, who has been treating the mentally unstable Peter, interrogates him about Molly's murder. Hearing the distress in her son's voice, Mrs. Crowley orders the doctor to leave, and tells Halloran about Fenner's visit. When Halloran asks Fenner about Peter's mental state, the doctor asserts that he is schizophrenic. As Halloran is about to leave the Fenner house, Roper arrives. When Elizabeth hears the two men arguing, she begins to worry about her uncle's erratic behavior and goes to search the hospital files, but is interrupted by the hospital secretary. Notified by the secretary about Elizabeth's furtive search, Halloran informs her that he has read her uncle's files and has learned that the doctor left Toronto after his misdiagnosis resulted in a patient's death. Elizabeth then confides that she fears Roper is blackmailing her uncle, prompting the inspector to drive back to the club where he calls Roper a liar and a cheat and discloses that he discovered that Roper was dishonorably discharged from the army and is deeply in debt.From the opening shot of the camera travelling across a road to meet an on-coming police car this 1956 film grabs your attention. John Mills plays a tough hard-hitting police officer investigating the murder of a brash blonde woman liked by all the men at the Tennis Club, but loathed by the town's envious women. As the film develops there are several plausible suspects, but Mills' tactics are not appreciated by the "Town on Trial" nor the young woman he gets involved with, played very charmingly by Barbara Bates (who died in 1969 aged 43).Charles Coburn (father of James) plays a sinister pipe-smoking doctor - suspect No 1. Derek Farr, drunken secretarwhile Fay Compton has a small role as his mother. Dandy Nichols has a couple of short scenes, uncredited, of course, while Harry Fowler has a hardly worth-while few frames as a bandleader - to who's music Elizabeth Seal (soon to become famous in "Irma La Douce") dances a phrenetic and sexy mambo in her first film role. There's a very revealing scene with Geoffrey Keen, as Liz Seal's domineering father, showing upper-middle class 50s morals when he makes it clear that ‘what the neighbours think' is more important than the murder of a woman, however unpopular she may be. y of the Tennis Club, suspect No 2, and Alec McCowen, a slightly deranged young man, suspect No 3,while Fay Compton has a small role as his mother. Dandy Nichols has a couple of short scenes, uncredited, of course, while Harry Fowler has a hardly worth-while few frames as a bandleader - to who's music Elizabeth Seal (soon to become famous in "Irma La Douce") dances a phrenetic and sexy mambo in her first film role. There's a very revealing scene with Geoffrey Keen, as Liz Seal's domineering father, showing upper-middle class 50s morals when he makes it clear that ‘what the neighbours think' is more important than the murder of a woman, however unpopular she may be. An amusing bit of editing when Mills says ‘...if only someone in this town would talk...' and cuts straight to a loud baby's cry; lots of nervously descriptive music by Trevor Duncan and plenty of fast police cars throughout the film. The Oakley Park exteriors were shot at Weybridge, and the final scenes at the Holy Trinity Church in Roehampton, but though full of well-directed suspense, these scenes are a complete copy of the ending of "Mine Own Executioner". The film, directed by John Guillermin, has plenty of tension and John Mills is full of acerbic, brusque rhetoric - an excellent, tight performance.
Photo Credit: Tracker748
Sir John Mills CBE (22 February 1908 – 23 April 2005) was an English actor who appeared in more than 120 films in a career spanning seven decades. On screen, he often played people who are not at all exceptional, but become heroes because of their common sense, generosity and good judgement. He received an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his work in Ryan's Daughter (1970).
Cast & Crew
John GuillerminDirector