A GI deserter frames a girl for killing a blackmailer and holds her captive while seeking gems.A GI deserter frames a girl for killing a blackmailer and holds her captive while seeking gems.A GI deserter frames a girl for killing a blackmailer and holds her captive while seeking gems.
Photos
Douglas Ives
- Postman
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThis B-movie seems t have had a convoluted history. It was passed by the BBFC as Cat and Mouse at 85m 49s on February 18th 1958 with the distributor listed as Anvil Films. It was then passed on December 11th 1958 as The Desperate Ones at the same running time with the distributor listed as Eros Films. It does not seem to have had a UK release until it went out in February 1960 (as Cat and Mouse) as supporting film to "Butterfield 8" on the ABC circuit, cut to 79 minutes.
- Quotes
Det. Supt. Harding: I know that look of yours Stuart. Alright, let's have it.
Det. Sgt. Paige: Well, sir. If this ginger-headed chap and his girlfriend were in this lark together, you'd rightly expect only one bed to have been used upstairs, not two.
Det. Supt. Harding: You've got a nasty mind.
- SoundtracksRockin', Lovin', Baby
Number written by Edwin Astley
Featured review
Ann Sears calls on Hilton Edwards at his request. Her father had been hanged for murder during a jewelry robbery twenty years ago. Now her mother has just died. Edwards is here to collect the jewelry. Miss Sears says she does not know anything about any jewelry. Edwards becomes threatening, and she pushes him off. He falls onto the floor, hitting his head on the mantel. The next thing Miss Sears knows, Lee Patterson is talking to her about getting rid of the corpse. Eventually they flee to her home, where he starts out wheedling and ends up threatening.
Paul Rotha's movie has a dreamlike, nightmarish quality to it, as circumstances and people push Miss Sears in one direction or the other, and she goes along, helpless and knowing it, powerless to do anything about it. Perhaps that quality is derived from John Creasey's source novel. He once described his method as "I've no idea ahead of time what will develop. The plot and any other ideas all happen simultaneously in the - if you'll forgive the pompous phrase - in the act of creation as it were. None of it is easy."
Well, it seems to have worked for Creasey, who wrote something between 500 and 600 books. That sounds nightmarish to me, and Rotha has certainly captured that quality in his movie.
Paul Rotha's movie has a dreamlike, nightmarish quality to it, as circumstances and people push Miss Sears in one direction or the other, and she goes along, helpless and knowing it, powerless to do anything about it. Perhaps that quality is derived from John Creasey's source novel. He once described his method as "I've no idea ahead of time what will develop. The plot and any other ideas all happen simultaneously in the - if you'll forgive the pompous phrase - in the act of creation as it were. None of it is easy."
Well, it seems to have worked for Creasey, who wrote something between 500 and 600 books. That sounds nightmarish to me, and Rotha has certainly captured that quality in his movie.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Besuch bei Mr. Scruby
- Filming locations
- Halliford Studios, Manygate Lane, Shepperton, Surrey, England, UK(studio: produced at Halliford Studios England)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 19 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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