Witness in the Dark

Witness in the Dark is a 1959 British crime drama film directed by Wolf Rilla, and starring Patricia Dainton, Conrad Phillips, Madge Ryan and Nigel Green.[1][2] It was produced by Patricia Dainton's husband, Norman Williams.

Witness in the Dark
British theatrical poster
Directed byWolf Rilla
Screenplay byLeigh Vance
John Lemont
Based onan original play by James Parish
Produced byNorman Williams
StarringPatricia Dainton
Conrad Phillips
Madge Ryan
Nigel Green
CinematographyBrendan J. Stafford
Edited byBernard Gribble
Music byPhilip Green
Production
companies
Alliance Film Distributors Limited (present)
Sydney Box Associates (present)
Ethiro Productions
Distributed byRank Film Distributors (UK)
Release date
  • December 1959 (1959-12) (UK)
Running time
62 min
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

Premise

Jane Pringle (Patricia Dainton), a blind telephone operator, is going to visit her elderly neighbour Mrs Temple (Enid Lorimer) when she brushes against a man who tries to sneak past her on the stairs and does not respond when she asks who is there. Jane goes up to Mrs Temple's flat and finds her murdered. The man on the stairs (Nigel Green) was searching for a valuable brooch that Jane had advised Mrs Temple to find a hiding place for. Later, after Jane has inherited the brooch from Mrs Temple, she finds herself targeted by the intruder.

Cast

Recent assessments of the film

According to the Radio Times, "Coming between Bachelor of Hearts and Village of the Damned, this is one of Wolf Rilla's lesser efforts. However, he conjures up a pleasing sense of menace that anticipates Wait until Dark as he subjects blind telephonist Patricia Dainton to the murderous machinations of a prowler. As so often in thrillers of this kind, much depends on contrivance and the script might have concealed its hand with a little more artfulness. But Dainton's performance is superior to that seen in the majority of British Bs";[2] TV Guide on the other hand, finds the film "standard and predictable," though "Dainton gives a nice performance".[3] NoirWorthWatching describes the film as "efficiently directed," and concludes that "in many ways [it] is more of a movie than its 62-minute length might suggest. Very much worth watching."[4]

References

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