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The Long Dark Hall

Two great Broadway stars at their greatest!
1951 | 86m | English

(547 votes)

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Popularity: 2 (history)

Details

A devoted family man tries to help a beautiful alcoholic showgirl with her life, and becomes the the only suspect when someone else murders her.
Release Date: Feb 06, 1951
Director: Anthony Bushell, Reginald Beck
Writer: Edgar Lustgarten, Nunnally Johnson
Genres: Drama, Crime
Keywords falsely accused, devoted family man
Production Companies Cusick International Films Inc., Five Ocean Films Ltd.
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Aug 04, 2024
Entered: Apr 20, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
Rex Harrison Arthur Groome
Lilli Palmer Mary Groome
Tania Heald Sheila Groome
Henrietta Barry Rosemary Groome
Dora Sevening Mary's mother
Ronald Simpson Mary's father
Anthony Dawson The Man
Brenda De Banzie Mrs Rogers
Ballard Berkeley Supt. Maxey
Raymond Huntley Chief Inspector Sullivan
William Squire Sergeant Cochcran
Denis O'Dea Sir Charles Morton
Anthony Bushell Clive Bedford
Henry B. Longhurst Judge
Patricia Cutts Rose Mallory
Meriel Forbes Marjorie Danns
Douglas Jefferies Dr Conway
Michael Medwin Leslie Scott
Colin Gordon Pound
Lionel Murton Jefferson
Eric Pohlmann Mr Polaris
Jenny Laird Mrs Sims
Frank Tickle Alfred Tripp
Lilli Molnar Mrs Polaris
Jill Bennett 1st Murdered Girl
Fletcher Lightfoot Jury Foreman
Anthony Shaw Clerk of the Court
Tom Macaulay Ironworks Manager
Richard Littledale Mr. Sims
Tony Quinn Joe
Ernest Blyth Court Clerk (uncredited)
Name Job
Anthony Bushell Director
Edgar Lustgarten Novel
Nunnally Johnson Screenplay
John Glen Assistant Editor
Benjamin Frankel Original Music Composer
Wilkie Cooper Director of Photography
Tom Simpson Editor
George Paterson Art Direction
Elizabeth Hennings Costume Design
John O'Gorman Makeup Artist
Reginald Beck Director
W.E. Fairchild Additional Dialogue
Iris Tilley Hairdresser
Adrian Pryce-Jones Assistant Director
Peter Price Third Assistant Director
Kitty Spreckley Sound Editor
Fred Turtle Sound Mixer
Eric Besche Camera Operator
Pat Wallace Script Supervisor
Betty Forster Continuity
Name Title
Rex Harrison Associate Producer
Anthony Bushell Producer
Peter Cusick Producer
Huntington Hartford Producer
Ronald Kinnoch Associate Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 4 6 1
2024 5 4 7 2
2024 6 3 6 1
2024 7 6 18 2
2024 8 3 7 2
2024 9 5 7 1
2024 10 3 8 1
2024 11 3 8 1
2024 12 2 4 1
2025 1 3 6 1
2025 2 2 3 1
2025 3 2 3 1
2025 4 1 1 1
2025 5 1 1 1
2025 6 1 1 1
2025 7 0 0 0
2025 8 0 1 0
2025 9 2 3 1
2025 10 2 2 2

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Reviews

John Chard
7.0

Circumstantial evidence old boy. Juries won't have it. They don't like it and they don't trust it. When Arthur Groome (Rex Harrison) finds his girlfriend murdered at her Earls Court flat and becomes stricken with grief and fear and promptly runs from the scene of the crime. Questioned by the pol ... ice about the crime, Arthur, a married man, in panic denies all knowledge of the girl. Soon, however, he finds himself charged with murder and inexorably drawn towards the gallows... Directed by Anthony Bushell and Reginald Beck, it is adapted to screenplay by Nunnally Johnson and William Fairchild from Edgar Lustgarten's novel. Harrison's real life wife at the time, Lilli Palmer, plays his loyal spouse here, while Benjamin Frankel scores the music and Wilkie Cooper is the cinematographer. Largely ignored and underseen these days, due in the main that some critics of the time noted it has uncomfortable parallels to the real life Harrison and Carole Landis suicide affair - plus Harrison himself quickly denounced the film as dreadful - it's actually a decent wrong man court case picture often filmed in gorgeous film noir styles. There is no mystery element here, for we know Arthur is innocent, and in fact we know who the killer is. We are given two murders in the first twenty minutes, each a year apart, the first is photographed on the outside in shadows, gaslights and upon a moist cobbled alleyway. The second, where the object of Arthur's lovelorn attention (Patricia Cutts) resides, is stifling in its cruel intensity. It's a sly story of obsession, circumstantial devilments, manipulation and somewhat oddly, loyalty. The suspense is ramped up as Arthur gets ever deeper in the mire during the court case (look how Cooper photographs the critical sequences in court), while his loving wife is being befriended by the real murderer (a wonderfully rat faced Anthony Dawson) who has his own distorted motives that he wants to bare out. Viewing it now the police work due to the writing comes off as being very shoddy, and the finale is just a bit too much leftfield to wholly satisfy. Yet this is a very tidy Brit-Noir styled suspenser that comes recommended to fans of leading man and noirsh visuals. 7/10

May 16, 2024