The Night Won't Talk

1952
The Night Won't Talk
6.2| 1h1m| en| More Info
Released: 01 October 1952 Released
Producted By: Corsair Pictures
Country: United Kingdom
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Synopsis

When a beautiful young artist's model is strangled in her bed, Scotland Yard find themselves with three suspects -- her sinister ex-husband (Elwyn Brook-Jones), a sexually disturbed artist (Ballard Berkeley) and her violent new boyfriend (John Bailey), who is prone to unexplained blackouts.To catch the killer, the police must set a dangerous trap with the aid of a famous sculptress (Hy Hazell).

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kidboots ....scream the headlines - there seemed to be something about murder movies set in the glamorous world of upmarket Chelsea which attracted movie goers like a magnet. Maybe it was a case of murder and death could also come to the rich and famous as well as the poor and underprivileged!! With the dynamic duo of Brock Williams (script) and Daniel Birt (direction) behind the scenes, this was an intelligent though actionless talkie thriller and left the viewer in no doubt as to the perpetrator. Stella Smith, a Chelsea artist's model is found murdered and the three likely suspects sure are jittery!! They are Kenneth Wills, who had last used Stella as a model just a few hours before, Martin Soames, secretary of the Portrait Painters Club and whom the police dub a highly unlikeable character and Clayton Hawkes. Hawkes is the most intriguing character, he was engaged to the beautiful Hazel - until Stella came along. He and Stella also had a blazing row at the local artist's café only the night before and Hawkes also suffers from that malady so beloved of crime writers - the "occasional blackout syndrome"!! He's suffering from that this morning and Hazel volunteers to help him through but someone else also offers their services!! She is exotic artist Theodora Castle (Hy Hazell) who seems to be the only calm voice of reason when everyone around her is losing their heads!! - but is she??Hy Hazell stands out as a very solid performer (maybe because she is the only one who doesn't act like she has something to hide). Her real name was Hyacinth (believe it or not) and she was mainly a musical star who was billed as Britain's answer to Betty Grable until the lean 1950s found her doing time in those dreaded quickies!! Mary Germain played Hazel (not very imaginative) and was a Sally Grey lookalike. She was only 18 and gave a good performance but her career was sparse and she soon disappeared from the screen. At only just over 50 minutes there is not a lot of time for characterization - Stella has been busy and the police find she has married and divorced the creepy Soames in her dim, dark past but even though the police are initially interested, Soames doesn't rate a second glance!!
robert-temple-1 This is a really boring fifties British B picture, with little to recommend it. It is ostensibly set in fifties Chelsea, and when one gets outside the studio sets, one does catch some glimpses of it. Chelsea as a former centre of London Bohemianism is an interesting subject for someone to make a film about one day. The Chelsea artists who populate the characters of this story of the murder of an artist's model could have been made much more interesting if the script were not so corny. The only survival of Bohemian Chelsea today is the Chelsea Arts Club (founded 1891), though it had to open up its membership to non-artists long ago for financial reasons when the price of the lease doubled, and there are too many affluent trendies there now. But it is the same building with much of the original atmosphere, it still has its billiard table, and although most of the old impoverished members with their goatee beards who propped up the bar have died, the oil paintings which had to be sold years ago, when the walls were stripped to save the Club, have long since been replaced by very nice ones, if not as valuable as originals by the Founder, Whistler. The old-style 'school food' of boiled potatoes and simple dishes has long since been replaced by superb cuisine, and dinnertime is always full. There were two women members who always used to walk around the Club naked (with no one batting an eye), but that sort of thing does not happen any more. Oh well, hopes that something of the old Chelsea might be seen in this film were dashed, as it is nothing to write home about.
JohnHowardReid British "B" features are usually not a great investment in time or money, but this is the exception that proves the rule. It's very neatly directed against authentic Chelsea backgrounds by Daniel Birt and boasts a really fine performance by Hy Hazell (a stage actress I once had the pleasure of meeting) in one of her regrettably rare screen appearances. Admittedly, the screenplay is inclined to be somewhat over-talkative (a sure giveaway of the film's modest budget) and to lose momentum halfway through. But it's still worth watching. Director Daniel Birt plays fair with his audiences – which is something I like! Admittedly, if you can't spot the murderer, you are definitely not a frequent movie watcher, but I enjoyed the game anyway!
malcolmgsw This was made at the small Viking Studios as a result we have small sets and a small number of actors.The film starts with a young model being murdered in her bed.The case is investigated by Ballard Berkley in his familiar detective role,some 20 years before finding fame at the end of his career as the Colonel in Fawlty Towers.We have the usual number of suspects with the usual motives for killing the model.However as with many of such films you learn to discount the most obvious suspects which then leaves you with just one obvious murderer.Films such as this were picked up by Associated British Pathe probably to support some Hollywood opus and thus help them meet their quota.This film has a running time of under an hour so it jogs along at a reasonable pace,and is entertaining,if a bit predictable.