Hot Ice | |
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Directed by | Kenneth Hume |
Written by |
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Based on | Weekend at Thrackley Alan Melville |
Produced by | Charles Reynolds |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Ted Lloyd |
Edited by | John Shirley |
Music by | Ivor Slaney |
Production company | Charles Reynolds Productions |
Distributed by | Apex Film Distributors |
Release date |
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Running time | 65 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Hot Ice is a 1952 British comedy crime film directed by Kenneth Hume and starring John Justin, Barbara Murray and Ivor Barnard. [1] It was released as a second feature. It is based on the 1934 novel Weekend at Thrackley by Alan Melville and its subsequent play version. An eccentric invites an assortment of guests to his country house, planning to rob them of their valuables.
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Weekend at Thrackley is a 1934 detective novel by the British writer Alan Melville. A whodunit with comic overtones, it takes the form of a country house mystery, a genre at its height during the decade. His debut novel, it was a commercial success and led to him giving up his job in the timber trade to become a full-time writer. It was reissued in 2018 by the British Library Publishing, as part of a group of crime novels from the Golden Age of Detective Fiction.
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