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Category:    Home > Reviews > Noir > Thriller > Crime > Detective > Mystery > Drama > British > British Cinema – Crime & Noir (Blackout/Home To Danger/Meet Mr. Callaghan/Bond Of Fear/No Trace/Recoil/VCI DVD Set) + Campbell’s Kingdom (Network U.K./Region Two/2/PAL DVD)

British Cinema – Crime & Noir (Blackout/Home To Danger/Meet Mr. Callaghan/Bond Of Fear/No Trace/Recoil/VCI DVD Set) + Campbell’s Kingdom (Network U.K./Region Two/2/PAL DVD)

 

Picture: C     Sound: C     Extras: C     Films: B-/C

 

 

Note: While the VCI set is Region 1/NTSC, Campbell’s Kingdom is a Region 2/PAL DVD that can only be operated on machines capable of playing back DVDs that can handle Region Two/2/PAL format software and can be ordered from our friends at Network U.K. at the website addresses provided at the end of the review.

 

 

One of the things I enjoy about DVD, especially in its later years, is that all the companies in the marketplace are now digging deeper than ever for new material to issue that is not available, has not been for many years and in some cases, is long overdue.  VCI is one of the companies best at this all along and among their releases have been a recent cycle of British B-movies that have gone unseen in the U.S. since at least the 1970s.  Their new British Cinema – Crime & Noir DVD set offers six very pleasant, exceptional thrillers that are real Noirs (all made before 1958) and have the look and darkness, often along with the thematics that make them true Noirs.  We will also compare to a color feature at the time from Network DVD in the U.K., Campbell’s Kingdom.

 

 

Besides the quality of the work in the VCI collection, they turn out to be films of note because of the people who made them behind the scenes.  This will become apparent as each film is described.

 

 

Blackout (1950) was directed by producer Robert S. Baker, who made many such films in both capacities before moving on to TV success with The Baron and especially the hit series The Saint and Return Of The Saint, all reviewed elsewhere on this site.  This tale of a blind man (Maxwell Reed) who suddenly gets his site back after coming across a dead body and some killers is a tight noir thriller that has suspense and solid acting, including the great Eric Pohlmann (who moved on to usually play the villain in many a spy film and TV show, thanks in part to friends like Baker) as the main heavy.  A very impressive film, it was written by John Gilling (who later wrote for The Saint, The Champions and Department S) and has co-producer Monty Norman as its Director of Photography.  Norman became producer on most of the ITC hit action/spy shows that he usually co-created with Dennis Spooner.

 

Home To Danger (1951) is an early film by the great journeyman director Terrance Fisher, known for his many Hammer Horror films and other thrillers, this is one of his best as a drug dealer tires to kill the daughter of his dead partner when the deceased’s daughter inherits his house.  Helping is a solid script by Ian Stuart Black (The Saint, Dr. Who, Star Maidens) that also has plenty of suspense and action.  Guy Rolfe is good as the lead.

 

Meet Mr. Callaghan (1954) was a solid attempt to launch a movie series franchise with Derrick De Marney as Peter Cheyney’s hard boiled private eye Slim Callaghan, once played by no less than Michael Rennie.  Though it did not work out, the film is fun, just Noir enough to qualify and was shot by no less than Director of Photography Harry Waxman.  Adrienne Corri also stars.  Note that Cheyney had also created Lemmy Caution, another hardboiled detective played for decades by Eddie Constantine, most famously in Jean Luc-Godard’s Alphaville (1965).

 

Bond Of Fear (1956) offers another Gilling script in a clever (and lower budgeted) variant on William Wyler’s VistaVision thriller The Desperate Hours (1955, also reviewed on this site) as a criminal on the loose takes a nice suburban family hostage.  This time, instead of taking place in their big, expensive home, it takes place in their vacation trailer.  The results are very good and John Colicos is a good villain; a role he would repeat well throughout his career.  Dermot Walsh, Jane Barrett and Alan MacNaughton also star.

 

No Trace (1950) is another Noir involving Gilling and Baker, but this time, Baker wrote it and Gilling directs this effective story of a mystery writer (Hugh Sinclair, who twice played The Saint at RKO years before the TV show) who kills a black mailer and intends to get away with it, but it will not be that simple.  Berman co-produced this slick offering that shows Sinclair could have continued as Simon Templar if RKO had let him and also features an early Barry Morse (The Fugitive, The Adventurer, Space: 1999) as a police officer.

 

Recoil (1953) rounds out the set with Gilling writing and directing this story of a woman (Jean Talbot again) pretending to be a criminal to catch the men who killed her father, a jeweler.  Producer Baker did the cinematography and it is as suspenseful as the other films.  When you finish watching the films by this team, you’ll understand how they had the talent to innovate TV and genres no matter where they worked.  Kieron Moore and Elizabeth Sellars also star.

 

 

In contrast, Ralph Thomas’ Campbell’s Kingdom (1957) has Dirk Bogarde as the title character with six moths to live, travelling to the Canadian Rockies to take over land his grandfather left him and dealing with people trying to stop his total claim or the fact that grandpa believed there is oil in the land.  With no one apparently known how to drain him sideways (no milkshake references here) but Stanley Baker is the bad guy, Barbara Murray “the girl” and the cast is rounded out by Michael Craig, Jon Laurie, Stanley Maxted and Robert Brown.  Though ambitious, it is also too melodramatic for its own good and sometimes tires too hard, but it has a few interesting moments just the same.  Thomas moved on to play Bulldog Drummond in two films that tried to revive the character in the Bond-era: Deadlier Than The Male and Some Girls Do.

 

 

The 1.33 X 1 black & white image in all cases on the VCI set are a little soft, but Black is solid even when detail is an issue.  The anamorphically enhanced 1.78 X 1 Campbell was shot in by the great Director of Photography Ernest Stewart (The Avengers, Fu Manchu and Bulldog Drummond franchises in the 1960s) making this look good, but despite being a new HD transfer, the color is inconsistent and problematic throughout.  Too bad, because despite an older color format, this looks like it could be good from some of the shots.  The Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono is dated in all cases and seems a generation or tow down, depending on the film, but are all audible enough to enjoy.  Extras are absent on the VCI set, but the Network disc has three image galleries.

 

 

As noted above, you can order the Campbell’s Kingdom PAL DVD import exclusively from Network U.K. at:

 

http://www.networkdvd.net/

 

or

 

www.networkdvd.co.uk

 

 

-   Nicholas Sheffo


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