|
Diana Dors and Victor Mature |
THE LONG HAUL (1957). Director/co-screenplay: Ken Hughes.
Colorized.
American ex-GI Harry Miller (Victor Mature) lives in England with his wife, Connie (Gene Anderson) and little boy, Butch (Michael Wade). Desperate to find work he comes afoul of crooked trucker, Joe Easy (Patrick Allen of
Night Creatures) and Easy's "easy" girlfriend, Lynn (Diana Dors), who transfers her affections to Harry after Joe is brutal with her. Naturally this doesn't sit well with either Connie or Joe. Still Joe, Harry and Lynn wind up driving a truck full of stolen furs to the river for an illicit rendezvous. They've been told they must get on the ship and sail to America with the furs to avoid prosecution, but Harry may not be able to leave his wife and child behind no matter what ...
|
Patrick Allen with Mature |
The Long Haul is a very good example of British film noir with all of the usual elements. Of course these elements -- desperate man pulled into crime, a tug of war between wife and mistress, sexy femme fatale with redeemable features -- are all quite familiar to the viewer, but they are all blended together quite well and bolstered by some fine acting. In the right role, as this is, Mature can certainly deliver and his portrait of this weak, confused man is right on target. Dors proves that she isn't just big breasts and blond hair. Patrick Allen is also terrific as the slimy Joe, calculating the odds until the last. Liam Redmond and Peter Reynolds are also notable as two ill-fated gentlemen, Casey and Lynn's brother, Frank. Trevor Duncan has crafted an exciting score as well. Reynolds and Dors both appeared in
Man Bait. Ken Hughes also wrote and directed
Heatwave.
Verdict: Absorbing, well-acted British crime thriller. ***.
Another noir I need to see. Always liked Mature, and LOVE Miss Dors--she also got stronger and stronger as an actor after her sex symbol phase ended.
ReplyDeleteHave a great week, Bill! Thanks as always for your excellent and entertaining blogs!
-C
And thank you, Chris, for reading and commenting! Much appreciated!
ReplyDeleteI completely concur with your assessment of Dors and agree that Mature was a very likable performer!