Smokescreen (film)

Last updated

Smokescreen
"Smokescreen" (1964).jpg
Lobby card autographed by Deryck Guyler
Directed by Jim O'Connolly
Written byJim O'Connolly
Produced byRonald Liles
John I. Phillips
Starring Peter Vaughan
John Carson
Yvonne Romain
Gerald Flood
CinematographyJack Mills
Edited by Henry Richardson
Music by Johnny Gregory
Production
company
Distributed byButcher's Film Service
Release date
  • 1964 (1964)
Running time
70 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

Smokescreen is a 1964 British comedy crime drama film, written and directed by Jim O'Connolly and starring Peter Vaughan. [1]

Contents

Plot

Mr Roper, an insurance investigator, travels to Brighton to assess the apparent death of a businessman after his burning car was seen crashing over a cliff into the sea. The insurance company is suspicious, as the man had only recently taken out life insurance for a large sum. The car is recovered and no body is found. Roper and the police have to find out whether they are dealing with an accident, an insurance fraud or a murder.

Cast

Production

The opening scenes were shot in London, but much of the rest of the film was shot on location in West Sussex and East Sussex, including the Brighton area. The scene featuring Deryck Guyler as the station master was shot at Hellingly railway station, which has been a private residence since the Cuckoo Line ceased operating in 1968. [2]

Critical reception

The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "Although familiar in style and idiom, this pleasant little mystery story has a few features that lift it out of the ordinary. The central figure – a bowler-hatted, umbrella-carrying, shrewd and gently humorous insurance man, with a streak of monetary meanness – is unconventional. So is the refreshingly off-hand police inspector played by Glynn Edwards. Above all, the general economy of the script makes this thriller much less improbable than many of its kind; there are no glaring loopholes or unexplained incidents. It is a pity that the Brighton insurance representative had to be in love with the murdered man's wife, for the plot is otherwise free of such convenient and contrived coincidences." [3]

The Radio Times Guide to Films gave the film 3/5 stars, writing: "This above-average programme filler is kept moving swiftly and painlessly by director Jim O'Connolly. Adultery, embezzlement and murder are all taken in his stride by Peter Vaughn as the insurance claims inspector who suspects that there is more to a blazing car wreck than meets the eye. While all around him give typically second-division performances, Vaughan plays with a dogged determination that is efficient, engaging and quite at odds with the more sinister characters he would essay later in his career." [4]

BFI Screenonline described the film as "an utterly charming B-film comedy-thriller that emphasises character as much as plot and makes full use of extensive location footage. The standard British second feature crime setting – a nightclub run by Cypriot/Maltese/Generally Swarthy types and populated by a dozen underpaid extras – is mercifully absent, as is any hint of a low-budget car chase. ... As a director, Jim O'Connelly may be best described as rudimentary, but his screenplay encompasses fascinating period detail. ... The set may be cheap and the shooting schedule limited, but the entertainment value is far greater than many an over-inflated epic." [5]

Film historians Steve Chibnall and Brian McFarlane selected Smokescreen as one of the 15 most meritorious British B films made between the Second World War and 1970. They describe it as an "uncommonly neat little insurance racket-cum-murder thriller" and praise the way that its comic relief is "built into the fabric of the film's main narrative action". [6]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hellingly railway station</span>

Hellingly was a railway station on the now closed Polegate to Eridge line in East Sussex. It served the village of Hellingly.

<i>Strongroom</i> (film) 1962 British film by Vernon Sewell

Strongroom is a 1962 British 'B' crime drama film directed by Vernon Sewell and starring Derren Nesbitt, Colin Gordon and Ann Lynn. A group of criminals lock two bank employees in a safe during a robbery.

<i>Tomorrow at Ten</i> 1962 British film by Lance Comfort

Tomorrow at Ten is a 1962 British second feature thriller film directed by Lance Comfort and starring John Gregson, Robert Shaw and Kenneth Cope.

<i>Wings of Danger</i> 1952 British film directed by Terence Fisher

Wings of Danger is a 1952 British second feature crime film directed by Terence Fisher and starring Zachary Scott, Robert Beatty and Kay Kendall. The screenplay, based on the 1951 novel Dead on Course by Trevor Dudley Smith and Packham Webb, concerns a pilot who is suspected of smuggling. It was released in the United States under its working title of Dead on Course.

<i>Blood Orange</i> (1953 film) 1953 film by Terence Fisher

Blood Orange is a 1953 British crime film directed by Terence Fisher and starring Tom Conway and Mila Parély. It was released in the United States as Three Stops to Murder. A private eye investigating a jewel robbery at a London fashion house finds himself involved in a murder mystery.

<i>Things Happen at Night</i> 1948 British film

Things Happen at Night is a 1947 British supernatural ghost comedy film directed by Francis Searle and starring Gordon Harker, Alfred Drayton, Robertson Hare and Garry Marsh. The film is based upon a stage play, The Poltergeist, by Frank Harvey. It was shot at Twickenham Studios. Despite the film's comparatively large budget it ended up being released as a second feature.

<i>The Painted Smile</i> 1962 British film by Lance Comfort

The Painted Smile is a 1962 British second feature thriller film directed by Lance Comfort and starring Liz Fraser, Kenneth Griffith, Peter Reynolds and Tony Wickert.

<i>The Third Alibi</i> 1961 British film by Montgomery Tully

The Third Alibi is a 1961 British 'B' thriller film directed by Montgomery Tully and starring Laurence Payne, Patricia Dainton, Jane Griffiths and Edward Underdown. The screenplay is by Maurice J. Wilson and Tully, based on the play A Moment of Blindness by Pip and Jane Baker.

<i>The Large Rope</i> 1953 film by Wolf Rilla

The Large Rope is a 1953 British crime film directed by Wolf Rilla and starring Donald Houston, Susan Shaw and Robert Brown.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jane Hylton</span> British actress (1927–1979)

Jane Hylton was an English actress who accumulated 30 film credits, mostly in the 1940s and 1950s, before moving into television work in the latter half of her career in the 1960s and 1970s.

<i>The Lost Hours</i> 1952 British film by David MacDonald

The Lost Hours is a 1952 British film noir directed by David MacDonald and starring Mark Stevens, Jean Kent and John Bentley. It was produced by Tempean Films which specialised in making second features at the time, and marked Kent's first descent into B films after her 1940s stardom. It was shot at Isleworth Studios and on location around London. The film's sets were designed by the art director Andrew Mazzei. It was released in the United States the following year by RKO Pictures as The Big Frame.

<i>Murder at 3am</i> 1953 film by Francis Searle

Murder at 3 a.m. is a 1953 British crime film second feature directed by Francis Searle and starring Dennis Price, Peggy Evans and Rex Garner. A Scotland Yard detective investigates a series of attacks on women.

<i>Third Party Risk</i> 1954 British film by Daniel Birt

Third Party Risk is a 1954 second feature British crime drama film directed by Daniel Birt and starring Lloyd Bridges, Simone Silva and Finlay Currie. It is based on the 1953 novel of the same name by Nicholas Bentley. It was released in the United States by Lippert Pictures under the alternative title TheDeadly Game.

<i>Recoil</i> (1953 film) 1953 British film by John Gilling

Recoil is a 1953 British 'B' crime film directed by John Gilling and starring Kieron Moore, Elizabeth Sellars and Edward Underdown.

<i>Never Look Back</i> (film) 1952 film

Never Look Back is a 1952 British drama film directed by Francis Searle and starring Rosamund John, Hugh Sinclair and Guy Middleton. The screenplay concerns a newly appointed female barrister whose career is threatened by a former lover. It was made by Hammer Films at the Mancunian Studios in Manchester.

<i>Never Back Losers</i> 1961 British film by Robert Tronson

Never Back Losers is a 1961 British 'B' crime film directed by Robert Tronson and starring Jack Hedley, Jacqueline Ellis and Patrick Magee. The film is based on the 1929 novel The Green Ribbon by Edgar Wallace. It was one of the Edgar Wallace Mysteries series, produced at Merton Park Studios in the early 1960s.

<i>The Straw Man</i> (film) 1953 film

The Straw Man is a 1953 British crime film directed by Donald Taylor and starring Dermot Walsh, Clifford Evans and Lana Morris. Its storyline focuses on insurance fraud. It is based on the 1951 novel Straw Man by Doris Miles Disney.

<i>The Hangman Waits</i> 1947 British film

The Hangman Waits is a 1947 British thriller film written, directed and produced by A. Barr Smith, starring Beatrice Campbell and John Turnbull. Shot documentary-style, the film tells the story of a murderer who comes to a grisly end.

<i>Profile</i> (1954 film) 1954 film

Profile is a 1954 British second feature thriller film directed by Francis Searle and starring John Bentley, Kathleen Byron and Thea Gregory. A murder mystery set in a magazine publishers.

<i>Attempt to Kill</i> 1961 British film directed by Royston Morley

Attempt to Kill is a 1961 British second feature ('B') film directed by Royston Morley and starring Derek Farr and Tony Wright. The screenplay was by Richard Harris, based on the 1929 Edgar Wallace novel The Lone House Mystery. It is part of the series of Edgar Wallace Mysteries films made at Merton Park Studios from 1960 to 1965.

References

  1. "Smokescreen". British Film Institute Collections Search. Retrieved 22 October 2023.
  2. Catford, Nick (2017). "Station Name: Hellingly Station". disused-stations.org.uk. Disused Stations. Retrieved 6 August 2024.
  3. "Smokescreen". Monthly Film Bulletin . 32 (372): 10. 1 January 1965.
  4. Radio Times Guide to Films (18th ed.). London: Immediate Media Company. 2017. p. 851. ISBN   9780992936440.
  5. "Smokescreen (1964)". BFI Screenonline. Retrieved 17 October 2014.
  6. Steve Chibnall and Brian McFarlane, The British 'B' Film, Palgrave Macmillan, London, 2009, pp. 286–88.