The Full Treatment

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The Full Treatment
"The Full Treatment".jpg
Italian theatrical poster
Directed by Val Guest
Written byVal Guest
Ronald Scott Thorn
Based onThe Full Treatment
1959 novel
by Ronald Scott Thorn
Produced byVal Guest
Starring Claude Dauphin
Diane Cilento
Ronald Lewis.
Cinematography Gilbert Taylor
Edited by Bill Lenny
Music by Stanley Black
Production
companies
Distributed by Columbia Pictures
Release dates
October 1960 (UK)
21 June 1961 (U.S.)
Running time
120 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

The Full Treatment (also known as The Treatment and Stop Me Before I Kill!) is a 1960 black-and-white British thriller film directed by Val Guest and starring Claude Dauphin, Diane Cilento and Ronald Lewis. [1] [2] It is based on the 1959 novel of the same name by Ronald Scott Thorn.

Contents

Plot

English racing driver Alan Colby and his wife Denise were involved in a bad accident a year ago. Although they are both physically well, Alan struggles with mood swings and is increasingly violent. The couple travel to the Côte D'Azur on vacation where they meet Dr. Prade, a psychiatrist also from London. Denise discusses her troubled marriage with Prade, which angers Alan. After a fight, the couple reconcile and return to London.

Alan attempts to strangle Denise and is immediately horrified by his dark impulses. She begs him to seek help from Prade, and he reluctantly agrees. In an early session, Prade presses Alan to reveal how he would kill Denise. Alan confesses all of the details of his fantasy, which includes strangling Denise in bed, dismembering her body and dropping the pieces down a disposal chute in their apartment building.

After many sessions, Prade concludes that Alan believed that he had killed Denise at the moment of the crash and has been reliving those feelings ever since. Alan is ecstatic when Prade declares him cured.

Alan awakens the next morning and is surprised to find Prade in his apartment. He returns a key that Denise had given him when Alan was at his most dangerous. The men realize that Denise is gone. Prade pieces together clues, all of which resemble Alan's murderous fantasy, and they fear that he has killed Denise while in a psychotic fugue state. Prade attempts to take Alan to a clinic, but they are involved in an automobile accident while on the way there. In the confusion, Alan escapes to southern France. He surreptitiously spots Denise and Prade on a yacht.

Prade has deceived Denise into taking a holiday whilst believing that Alan is under intense psychiatric care. Alan, believing that Prade and Denise have conspired against him, appears with a gun at Prade's house. Prade tells Alan that he has been in a clinic for 10 days, causing Alan to question his sanity once again. However, Denise finds an estimate for repairs to Prade's car and realizes that he slaughtered his own cat in order to stage the murder scene to deceive Alan. When she confronts Prade, he reveals his love for Denise and attempts to escape on an old gondola lift. The cable snaps and Prade is killed.

Alan and Denise are reunited, but they are solemn after their ordeal.

Cast

Production

Val Guest said: "That was from a book by Ronald Scott Thorn, who strangely enough was our insurance doctor and put us all through the mill before, when we got our film insurances, he was the film industry's insurance doctor." Filming took place in the south of France. [3]

Reception

In a contemporary review for The New York Times , critic Howard Thompson called the film "a snug, tautly-strung little thriller" and wrote: "[T]he dialogue has a nice, cutting edge, the tempo and photography are crisp and the picture seems ready to slope off in suspenseful familiarity. But not quite. After the best scene of all (a carbolic couch session, where the camera, from the patient's viewpoint, restlessly whips around the doctor's office), the story flip flops to a surprising new plane. If the ending is a bit too comfortably melodramatic and neat, most spectators should be kept guessing, along with the bewildered young hero. ... Mr. Guest's package is a small one, but trim and adroitly tied. The contents are worth waiting for." [4]

Patrick Gibbs of The Daily Telegraph wrote: "Yes, it is a case of 'psychiatrist heal thyself,' one for the police rather than the Lancet. Only to be recommended, I'm afraid, to collectors of amiable nonsense." [5]

The Radio Times wrote: "[A]t times the writer/director, Val Guest, seems to think he's making a Hitchcock picture but he needs more than glamorous locations for that. He also needs Cary Grant and Ingrid Bergman." [6]

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References

  1. "The Full Treatment". British Film Institute Collections Search. Retrieved 17 February 2024.
  2. "The Full Treatment (1960) | BFI". Ftvdb.bfi.org.uk. Archived from the original on 8 July 2012. Retrieved 24 July 2014.
  3. Fowler, Roy (1988). "Interview with Val Guest". British Entertainment History Project.
  4. Thompson, Howard (22 June 1961). "Screen: Walt Disney's 'The Parent Trap' Opens". The New York Times . p. 23.
  5. Gibbs, Patrick (11 February 1961). "Film Notes". The Daily Telegraph . p. 11.
  6. "The Full Treatment | Film review and movie reviews". Radio Times. 8 April 2013. Retrieved 24 July 2014.