Film Review
The year before producer Peter Rogers and director Gerald Thomas
created one of the most enduring and popular phenomena in British
cinema, the
Carry On series, they
collaborated on this slick noir thriller, one of the team's few
diversions from comedy. Scripted by the prominent writer Francis
Durbridge (of Paul Temple fame), the film is one of the most convoluted
examples of its genre and will give you terminal apoplexy if you try to
follow every twist and turn of the devious plot. But that doesn't
prevent it from being fun.
Although it was made on a modest budget,
The Vicious Circle is an inspired
piece of filmmaking and stands up very well against the better known
British film noir classics. The lighting and camerawork have a
distinctly noirish feel to them and add to the sense of hopeless
entrapment in which the main protagonist finds himself, an unsuspecting
fly caught in a sinister web of intrigue. Superb performances
from John Mills and Derek Farr are shored up by fine supporting
contributions from Wilfrid Hyde-White and Lionel Jeffries, although if
you look closely enough you can see that each of these great talents
has his tongue firmly in his cheek.
The Vicious Circle looks too
much like a pastiche of a Hitchcock thriller to be taken too seriously (Durbridge
was obviously influenced by
The 39 Steps),
and the plot contrivances become a little too hard to swallow after a
while. Still, Thomas directs the film with aplomb and keeps us
hooked and guessing right up until the implausible well-I-never
denouement. Imagine how much better this film might
have been if had been made as an out-and-out comedy...
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Gerald Thomas film:
Carry on Sergeant (1958)
Film Synopsis
One evening, Harley Street doctor Howard Latimer is visited by a
journalist, Geoffrey Windsor, who is keen to write an article about his
work. During this unwelcome intrusion, Latimer receives a phone
call from an American friend asking him to collect Frieda Veldon, a
German actress, from London airport. Windsor offers to drive
Latimer to the airport and the doctor has no choice but to
accept. A short while later, Latimer finds Veldon lying dead in
his apartment, apparently murdered. Naturally, the good
doctor reports the killing to the police but he soon finds that he is
the prime suspect. Investigating the case, Detective Inspector
Dane soon uncovers enough evidence to send Latimer to the scaffold, but
the doctor insists he is innocent. Whilst hiding out at his
friend's apartment, Latimer receives a visit from a suspicious-looking
man who claims to have proof that will allow him to clear his name...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.