Blind Spot | |
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Directed by | Peter Maxwell |
Written by | |
Produced by |
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Starring |
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Cinematography | Arthur Graham |
Edited by | Jim Connock |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Butcher's Film Service |
Release date |
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Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Blind Spot is a 1958 British drama film directed by Peter Maxwell and starring Robert MacKenzie, Delphi Lawrence, Gordon Jackson, John Le Mesurier, and Michael Caine. [1] [2]
Laid up in a military hospital waiting for an operation, U.S. Army Captain Dan Adams, has lost his sight due to a head injury. While his doctors are waiting for his injury to heal before proceeding, Adams is driven off the base to a party but is dropped off at the wrong address.
Entering the house, he stumbles over a body and startles the killers Rushford and Schrieder. Realising Adams is blind, they knock him out and throw him down a flight of stairs. When Adams revives back in the same hospital, his tale of murder seems implausible, as no evidence of a crime is found, not even the distinctive tie pin he says he found beside the body.
After an operation to regain his sight, Adams finds the tie pin in the lining of his jacket. He sets out to track down the killers, starting with visiting the house he had accidentally been taken to. There he meets June Brent and her father, and learns that the tie pin belonged to June's brother Johnny, who had died in a plane crash a year earlier. Although Mr Brent is antagonistic to any investigation, having suffered a nervous breakdown after Johnny's death, June wants to find out the truth. She introduces Adams to a friend of Johnny's, aircraft mechanic Chalky White, and they start to investigate. Dan becomes even more determined to find the truth when an attempt is made on his life. He begins to suspect that Johnny might have stumbled on a smuggling racket, and perhaps did not die in the crash after all. After another attempt on his life, and June's kidnapping, Adams finally finds the truth about the mysterious death and the smuggling operation.
Principal location photography for Blind Spot took place at Majestic Hotel, Kensington, London, England. Studio shots were completed at Walton Studios, Walton-on-Thames, Surrey, England.[ citation needed ]
Blind Spot is a remake of Blackout , a 1950 British crime drama by the same producers, but a different director.c
The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "Limp and long-drawn-out, this is a highly improbable thriller. Robert Mackenzie makes Dan an unnecessarily unattractive character, and the rest of the cast are quite unable to overcome a feeble script." [3]
In British Sound Films: The Studio Years 1928–1959 David Quinlan rated the film as "average", writing: "Thriller is briskly paced and intriguing, but limply written and acted. A remake of Blackout (1950)." [4]
TV Guide gave Blind Spot one out of four stars, and wrote, "A few good turns, including the final chase, can't pep up a tired script." [5]
The Radio Times rated the film two out of five stars, calling it a "stolid British crime yarn." [6]
The Movie Scene gave the film three out of five stars, noting "Robert MacKenzie appeared to make only three movies yet going on what he does as Dan Adams in Blind Spot makes me think he could have had a solid movie career ... after a decent set up Blind Spot quickly unravels into an ordinary 1950s crime drama with nothing to make it stand out except that it features a young Michael Caine." [7]
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