The Sleeping Tiger | |
---|---|
Directed by | Joseph Losey |
Screenplay by | Harold Buchman Carl Foreman |
Based on | The Sleeping Tiger by Maurice Moiseiwitsch |
Produced by | Victor Hanbury Stuart Levy Joseph Losey |
Starring | Alexis Smith Alexander Knox Dirk Bogarde |
Cinematography | Harry Waxman |
Edited by | Reginald Mills |
Music by | Malcolm Arnold |
Production companies | Insignia Films Dorast Pictures |
Distributed by | Anglo-Amalgamated Film Distributors |
Release date |
|
Running time | 89 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Budget | $300,000 [1] |
The Sleeping Tiger is a 1954 British film noir directed by Joseph Losey and starring Alexis Smith, Dirk Bogarde and Alexander Knox. It was Losey's first British feature, which he directed under the pseudonym of Victor Hanbury due to being blacklisted in the McCarthy Era. [2] It was shot at Walton Studios and on location in London. The film's sets were designed by the art director John Stoll. It was released by Anglo-Amalgamated while in America it was distributed by Astor Pictures.
Two criminals are stalking the streets of London one dark night. Frank Clemmons (Dirk Bogarde), a cocky middle-class young man, holds up psychiatrist Dr Clive Esmond (Alexander Knox) at gunpoint outside his affluent home, but Esmond overpowers him.
Arriving home from Paris, Esmond's wife Glenda (Alexis Smith) is taken aback to discover Clemmons staying in their home as the new household guest. To avoid being turned over to the police, Clemmons has agreed to stay as a house guest, acting as a human guinea-pig subject to Esmond's psychoanalysis, which aims to release him from his criminal recidivism. Glenda has reservations about Clemmons and behaves in a cold, aloof manner towards him.
Clemmons undergoes regular analysis with Esmond, who is determined to get to the root of his criminality. In between these sessions, he goes riding with Glenda. Although at first indifferent to him, she soon finds herself growing attracted to him. With a fellow criminal in town, Clemmons one night steals some jewellery and leaves the house. A police inspector later interviews him about the crime, but he denies having committed it. After a while, Clemmons takes Glenda to the Metro, a hipster nightclub in Soho, where her conflicted attraction to him deepens. The next day, Glenda admonishes Clemmons for his violent behaviour towards a house-maid, Sally (Patricia McCarron), but their argument ends with a passionate clinch which indicates the beginning of an affair between them.
Initially oblivious, Esmond eventually finds his wife in a compromising position with Clemmons. Glenda's conflicted feelings plague her. Back at the Metro club with Clemmons, the two have a huge argument that overwhelms her. As they begin their journey home, Glenda is driving recklessly and out of control. A police car pursues them, but they manage to get away from it.
Sally's fiancé pays Esmond a visit to complain about the abuse she has had to endure from Clemmons. Her fiancé threatens to tell the police about the assault. No charges are pressed and Clemmons finds out that this is due to Esmond buying the man off with £100. He reacts by carrying out another robbery. When questioned by the police, Esmond ends up lying on behalf of Clemmons. A cunning ploy, this results in Clemmons pouring out a dramatic account of his tyrannical father, whom he deeply despised. As a boy, Clemmons stole and his father consequently turned him in to the authorities. Frank vowed revenge on his Father when he was released, but was then given a beating. His father died shortly thereafter, and his mother blamed him. Clemmons admits that he prayed for his father's death and has seen himself as worthy of punishment ever since. Esmond concludes that since his father's death, Clemmons has had to provide his own punishment for the rest of his life.
Esmond soon begins acting like a father figure towards Clemmons. The two enjoy carefree activities together until Glenda finds out and grows intensely jealous. She asks Clemmons to elope with her. However, with Esmond's psychiatric experiment over and his patterns of behaviour understood, Clemmons leaves and decides to turn himself in to the police. Glenda hysterically rushes to Esmond, claiming that Clemmons has assaulted her. Esmond goes upstairs with a gun and returns claiming that he has shot Clemmons dead. Glenda is heartbroken and ends up declaring her love for Clemmons. She then finds out that although there was a gunshot, Clemmons has escaped, wounded. She goes after him in her car. Clemmons gets into Glenda's car and they drive off at high speed. Highly distressed, Glenda swerves to avoid a lorry, but crashes the car. Clemmons survives, but Glenda dies in the wreckage.
Due to his alleged ties with the US Communist Party, the blacklisted Joseph Losey moved to London and began work on The Sleeping Tiger, his first British feature film. Despite being in England, he faced more problems. The British director Victor Hanbury, who had not directed a film since Hotel Reserve in 1944, [3] allowed Losey to use Hanbury's name as an alias. The American stars, Alexis Smith and Alexander Knox, were fearful of how appearing in Losey's film would affect their Hollywood careers. [4]
The Sleeping Tiger was the beginning of Losey's partnership with Dirk Bogarde, whom he later directed in The Servant , King & Country , Modesty Blaise and Accident , and with editor Reginald Mills who edited The Servant and King & Country.
According to Kinematograph Weekly the film was a "money maker" at the British box office in 1954. [5]
Joseph Walton Losey III was an American theatre and film director, producer, and screenwriter. Born in Wisconsin, he studied in Germany with Bertolt Brecht and then returned to the United States. Blacklisted by Hollywood in the 1950s, he moved to Europe where he made the remainder of his films, mostly in the United Kingdom. Among the most critically and commercially successful were the films with screenplays by Harold Pinter: The Servant (1963) and The Go-Between (1971).
Sir Dirk Bogarde was an English actor, novelist and screenwriter. Initially a matinée idol in films such as Doctor in the House (1954) for the Rank Organisation, he later acted in art house films, evolving from "heartthrob to icon of edginess".
Victim is a 1961 British neo-noir suspense film directed by Basil Dearden and starring Dirk Bogarde and Sylvia Syms. The first British film to explicitly name homosexuality and deal with it sympathetically, it premiered in the UK on 31 August 1961 and in the US the following February.
Accident is a 1967 British drama film directed by Joseph Losey. Written by Harold Pinter, it is an adaptation of the 1965 novel Accident by Nicholas Mosley. It is the third of four Losey–Pinter collaborations; the others being The Servant (1963), Modesty Blaise (1966) and The Go-Between (1971). At the 1967 Cannes Film Festival, Accident won the Grand Prix Spécial du Jury award. It also won the Grand Prix of the Belgian Film Critics Association.
Margaret Alexis Smith was a Canadian-born American actress, pin-up girl and singer. She appeared in several major Hollywood films in the 1940s and had a notable career on Broadway in the 1970s, winning a Tony Award in 1972 for the Stephen Sondheim-James Goldman musical Follies.
The Servant is a 1963 British drama film directed by Joseph Losey. It was written by Harold Pinter, who adapted Robin Maugham's 1948 novella. The Servant stars Dirk Bogarde, Sarah Miles, Wendy Craig and James Fox.
The Password Is Courage is a 1962 British comedy-drama war film written, produced, and directed by Andrew L. Stone and starring Dirk Bogarde, Maria Perschy, and Alfred Lynch. It was based on the 1954 World War II biography of the same name of Sergeant-Major Charles Coward by Ronald Payne and John Williams Garrod. It was distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.
Cast a Dark Shadow is a 1955 British suspense film noir directed by Lewis Gilbert and written by John Cresswell, based on the 1952 play Murder Mistaken by Janet Green. It stars Dirk Bogarde, Margaret Lockwood, Kay Walsh, Kathleen Harrison and Robert Flemyng. The film released on 20 September 1955, distributed by Eros Films Ltd. in the United Kingdom and Distributors Corporation of America in the United States. The story concerns a husband who murders his wife.
The Big Night is a 1951 American film noir directed by Joseph Losey, that features John Drew Barrymore, Preston Foster and Joan Lorring. The feature is based on a script written by Joseph Losey and Stanley Ellin, based on Ellin's 1948 novel Dreadful Summit. Hugo Butler and Ring Lardner, Jr. also contributed to the screenplay, but were uncredited when the film was first released owing to his Hollywood Ten conviction.
Modesty Blaise is a 1966 British spy-fi comedy film directed by Joseph Losey, produced by Joseph Janni, and loosely based on the popular comic strip Modesty Blaise by Peter O'Donnell, who co-wrote the original story upon which Evan Jones and Harold Pinter based their screenplay. It stars Monica Vitti as "Modesty", opposite Terence Stamp as Willie Garvin and Dirk Bogarde as her nemesis Gabriel. The cast also includes Harry Andrews, Michael Craig, Alexander Knox, Rossella Falk, Clive Revill, and Tina Aumont. The film's music was composed by Johnny Dankworth and the theme song, Modesty, sung by pop duo David and Jonathan. It was Vitti's first English-speaking role.
King and Country is a 1964 British war film directed by Joseph Losey, shot in black and white, and starring Dirk Bogarde and Tom Courtenay. The film was adapted for the screen by British screenwriter Evan Jones based on the play Hamp by John Wilson and a 1955 novel by James Lansdale Hodson.
The Spanish Gardener is a 1956 VistaVision and Technicolor film based on the 1950 eponymous novel by A. J. Cronin. The film, which stars Dirk Bogarde and Jon Whiteley, was directed by Philip Leacock.
The Captain's Table is a 1959 British comedy film directed by Jack Lee and starring John Gregson, Donald Sinden, Peggy Cummins and Nadia Gray. The film is based on the 1954 novel of the same title by Richard Gordon, later adapted into the 1971 German film The Captain starring Heinz Rühmann.
Hot Enough for June is a 1964 British spy comedy film directed by Ralph Thomas, and starring Dirk Bogarde with Sylva Koscina in her English film debut, Robert Morley and Leo McKern. It is based on the 1960 novel The Night of Wenceslas by Lionel Davidson. The film was cut by twenty minutes and retitled Agent 8+3⁄4 for the US release by the American distributor Continental Distributing.
The Doctor's Dilemma is a 1958 British comedy-drama film directed by Anthony Asquith and starring Leslie Caron, Dirk Bogarde, Alastair Sim, and Robert Morley. It is based on the 1906 play The Doctor's Dilemma by George Bernard Shaw. A satire on the pretensions of the medical profession and their concentration on treating patients who can pay well, it contrasts their world of imperfect science, always bumping up against unknowns, with the boundless spheres of love and beauty.
For Better, for Worse is a 1954 British comedy film in Eastmancolor directed by J. Lee Thompson and starring Dirk Bogarde, Susan Stephen and Cecil Parker. It was based on Arthur Watkyn's play of the same title.
The Lawless is a 1950 American film noir directed by Joseph Losey and features Macdonald Carey, Gail Russell and Johnny Sands.
The Wind Cannot Read is a 1958 British drama film directed by Ralph Thomas and starring Dirk Bogarde, Yoko Tani, Ronald Lewis and John Fraser. It was based on the 1946 novel by Richard Mason, who also wrote the screenplay.
The Gypsy and the Gentleman is a 1958 British costume drama film directed by Joseph Losey. It stars Melina Mercouri and Keith Michell.
A Man on the Beach (1955) is a British fiction featurette. It was directed by Joseph Losey and produced by Anthony Hinds for Hammer Films. Based on a story by Victor Canning adapted by Jimmy Sangster, his first script, the film stars Donald Wolfit, Michael Medwin and Michael Ripper.