Film Review
The Glass Tomb (inexplicably
released in the United States as
The
Glass Cage) comes towards the tail-end of a series of cheap,
noir-like crime dramas made by the British film company Hammer in the
early-to-mid 1950s, just before the company's fortunes suddenly
improved with its lucrative diversions into science-fiction and
horror. With its prestigious cast and interesting setting
(fairgrounds are a perfect location for film noir, as Hitchcock had
already shown in
Strangers on a Train) this
could have been one of Hammer's better crime offerings, but a lacklustre
script and some uninspired direction prevent it from achieving its full
potential.
John Ireland, the token American imposed on the production by its
American distributors, gives a reasonably convincing portrayal of a
carnival impresario, ably supported by an ensemble of British acting
talent that includes Honor Blackman and Sid James. Saddled with
an unconvincing American accent, Blackman lacks her usual charm but she
provides a welcome female presence in a predominantly male-oriented
drama. Some years before he became one of the UK's comedy
legends, Sid James was shaping up to be a very respectable character
actor, particularly well-suited to playing amiable heavies, such as the
one he plays so brilliantly in this film. The only blot on the
acting front is a child actor who is hideously dubbed by a woman with a
high-pitched voice, to sound like something out of a Disney cartoon.
Director Montgomery Tully clearly draws his inspiration from American
films noirs of the previous decade, employing high contrast lighting
very effectively in some scenes to create a sense of lurking
menace. One highpoint is a tense sequence on the London
underground, where an attempt by the villain of the piece to threaten a
potential victim is drowned out by the infernal rumbling of the
subterranean train. Elsewhere, Tully's imagination and commitment
seem to falter, with the result that some scenes are unbearably dull
and lifeless. Even though the film runs to a modest 59 minutes it
feels slightly overlong and ponderous. If only a little more care
and attention had been given to it
The
Glass Tomb could have been one of Hammer's most striking forays
into film noir, instead of a merely average entry in a pretty uneven
series.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Pel Pelham is an American impresario who dreams up the carnival
attraction of the century. Henri Sapolio, a.k.a. the Starving
Man, will go without food for seventy days, imprisoned in a glass tomb
which will allow paying onlookers to witness every day of his
ordeal. With money borrowed from his bookmaker friend Tony Lewis,
Pel raises the capital to get the tomb built on an area of land rented
in London. Before the show opens, a girl in the flat above
Sapolio's is murdered. The obvious suspect is her boyfriend,
Tony, but when Tony is himself killed the murder investigation
falters. The only person with a lead to the identity of the
girl's killer is Sapolio, but fortunately he is by now safely enclosed
in his glass prison. No murderer can reach him here, or so it
seems...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.