A Question of Suspense

1961 British film by Max Varnel From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A Question of Suspense is a low budget 1961 British black and white crime drama "B" film directed by Max Varnel and starring Peter Reynolds, Noelle Middleton and Yvonne Buckingham.[1] It was written by Lawrence Huntington from a story by Roy Vickers. It was one of several crime films starring Reynolds.[2]

Directed byMax Varnel
Screenplay byLawrence Huntington
Based onan original story by Roy Vickers
Produced byBill Luckwell
Jock MacGregor
Quick facts Directed by, Screenplay by ...
A Question of Suspense
Title frame of film
Directed byMax Varnel
Screenplay byLawrence Huntington
Based onan original story by Roy Vickers
Produced byBill Luckwell
Jock MacGregor
StarringPeter Reynolds
Noelle Middleton
Yvonne Buckingham
CinematographyPhilip Grindrod
Edited byRobert Hill
Music byWilfred Burns
Production
companies
Bill & Michael Luckwell Limited
Distributed byColumbia Pictures
Release date
  • 1961 (1961)
Running time
63 mins
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Plot

Tellman Drew is a businessman who has deposited £30,000 worth of forged bonds with his bank. When his chief clerk and childhood friend Frank Brigstock discovers the fraud, Drew offers him a partnership in his business, but lures him to a lonely spot by the coast and murders him and buries his body. Drew persuades the police that it was Frank who had been behind the scam and has absconded.

Rose Marples, who has been living with Frank as his wife, and has known both men since her youth, is not convinced. She begins her own investigation, ultimately discovering the burial site and bringing about Drew's demise.

Cast

Critical reception

Monthly Film Bulletin said "Thinly scripted murder-and-revenge melodrama, unexceptionally directed and working up to a tidy climax which was never in doubt for a moment."[3]

The Daily Cinema noted on 26 June 1961 that the film "concentrates its drama on the characters and what makes them tick."[4]

Production

The 1968 Report of the Film Industry Committee shows that the Irish Film Finance Corporation had invested in the production of the film.[5]

It was made at Ardmore Studios, Bray in Ireland. Although set in England, external scenes were filmed around Dublin and Greystones, including Frank Brigstock going to work on a CIÉ (Córas Iompair Éireann – Irish Transport Company) bus.

References

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