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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Intriguing British noir, derailed somewhat at the end,
By
This review is from: The Limping Man (DVD)
Though the credits show "directed by Charles De la Tour", that's just a pseudondym for the blacklisted Cy Endfield, who after a fascinating if somewhat inconsistent early career was pushed into exile in Europe, from which he never returned. This is his first British film, and it carries over his fascination with magic, his pessimistic noir sensibility, and his ability to find odd bits of business with minor characters that really stand out.
Lloyd Bridges plays Frank Prior, an American returning to London after the war and several years to reconnect with an old flame, actress Pauline French (Moira Lister). While on the airport tarmac he witnesses the man standing right next to him get shot and killed by a sniper from long distance. The man carries no identification and is presumed to be "Kendal Brown" by Scotland Yard, which quickly takes over the case; the sniper is unknown. Prior is questioned a bit and let go, but quickly turns out to be the center of a mystery involving his ex-girlfriend, the widow of "Brown" (Hélène Cordet), blackmail and smuggling. This is a very well-put-together and exciting Brit-noir, really excellent up until the last couple of reels which fall into place a little too easily - and in particular the last couple of minutes which turn everything around in the manner of a few other "lighter" noirs - but not nearly as successfully as, say, WOMAN IN THE WINDOW manages. Along the way there are lots of inventive touches though which keep the bad taste of the resolution from stinging too much: the sardonic, bitchy, yet entirely silent landlady's daughter (19-year-old Jean Marsh in her first role) who looks on the young Scotland Yard detective with amusement as he can't keep his eyes off her; the kids watching a forbidden TV murder mystery in secret while their parents watch it in another room - and while a couple fleeing the cops pass by; the magic trick performance punctuated by a cabaret song. An odd mixed bag of a film, more fascinating than really good, but like most of Endfield's work (he's only really well known for the 1964 ZULU) certainly deserving of a little more respect. There are currently only mediocre public domain copies in circulation; this Alpha Video copy isn't any worse than most, but the best way to obtain this is probably to get the VCI edition The Scar/The Limping Man - for about the same price you get this film, the truly great THE SCAR, and a terrific 1950s noirish TV program.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
A tolerable noir, but with plummy aristo accents and a cheat of an ending,
By
This review is from: The Limping Man (DVD)
This goose is reasonably well roasted, and even features some side dishes that are interesting to learn more about. The ending of The Limping Man, however, is so arbitrary and dishonest it makes clear how little regard for the audience, or for the integrity of their own movie, the producers must have had.
World War II vet Frank Pryor (Lloyd Bridges) returns to London from America after six years to look up an old flame, Pauline French (Moira Lister), now a successful actress. As he and the other passengers deplane and walk across to the terminal, Frank pauses for a moment and asks the man beside him for a light. There's a gunshot and the man crumples to the ground, shot by a marksman with a high-powered rifle, an assassin with a limp. The dead man was named Kendall Brown. With Inspector Braddock (Alan Wheatley) and Detective Cameron (Leslie Phillips) on the case, it's clear that Pryor is as mystified as everyone else. After Pryor leaves the police to find Pauline, Wheatley and Cameron visit Brown's lodgings...and find a photo of a good-looking young woman. Yes, the photo is of Pauline French. It's not long before Frank Pryor is up to his neck in murderous intrigue. The mix includes blackmail, smuggling, magic acts, gritty Thames-side docks, backstage theater doings, a pouting French singer and, Frank discovers, some indiscretions in Pauline's past. The plot, under Cy Endfield's direction, keeps moving briskly ahead. The photography is nifty, with lots of nighttime eeriness, shadowy theater cellars and fear-filled eyes highlighted in the gloom. But the movie reeks of class-conscious accents and acting. Whole generations of British actors, if they were to have a hope of succeeding as lead players, had to master that plummy, nasal, upper-class diction that was supposed to be the hallmark of an English gentleman or lady. When sound came to the movies, that social stratification based on how one spoke was enforced with a vengeance. Things began to change for lead players only when Michael Caine hit the big-time in Britain and kept his Cockney accent. So here's Leslie Phillips, who grew to be a fine farceur, slim, young and in a supporting role as Cameron. He was raised in poverty with a Cockney accent. His mother was determined that he'd have a chance at a better life so she saw that he had elocution lessons. Phillips wound up with one of the ripest upper-class accents you can imagine, and in a long career he has used it to great, leering effect. His Cameron is very keen on the female figure, a characteristic Phillips, now in his eighties and still acting, has in real life. Phillips is a character and great fun to watch. One of his best roles is as Lord Flamborough in 1994's Love on a Branch Line. It's one of those British television productions that you'll either be delighted by or puzzled with. Moira Lister's Pauline French (Lister was born and raised in South Africa) sounds like the carefully educated daughter of the English landed aristocracy, the kind of woman who schedules her love life with her husband as meticulously as she schedules her social engagements with her equals, and with considerably less frequency. Lister was a successful actress on the stage as well as in the movies. She sounds a little like Joan Greenwood. She gives such an overly bred, mannered performance it seems unlikely she'd ever be attracted to an American ex-GI like Lloyd Bridge's Frank Pryor. However, one of the pleasures of the movie is that Frank flies into London on a Lockheed Constellation. We see several shots of this most graceful of airplanes flying and on the ground. The ending of The Limping Man is a complete cheat. While some of us might enjoy at least some of this movie's 76 minutes, and I'm one of them, its conclusion left me feeling that I'd just been made a fool of. Cy Endfield, who directed the movie, did so under the name of Charles De la Tour, a man he paid to front for him. Endfield was blackballed in Hollywood during the witch-hunts. He could no longer get directing jobs so he left for Britain with his family. The only way his early British movies could be released in America was by hiding his name. He stayed in Britain and went on to direct using his real name Zulu, Mysterious Island, Sands of the Kalahari and others. This is a public domain film. My version is not in very good shape. |
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The Limping Man by Charles de la Tour (DVD - 2006)
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