The Man from Yesterday (1949 film)

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Directed byOswald Mitchell
Written byJohn Gilling
Produced byHarry Reynolds
Starring
The Man from Yesterday
Opening titles
Directed byOswald Mitchell
Written byJohn Gilling
Produced byHarry Reynolds
Starring
CinematographyCyril Bristow
Edited byRobert Johnson
Music byGeorge Melachrino
Production
company
International Motion Pictures
Distributed byRenown Pictures
Release date
  • May 1949 (1949-05)
Running time
68 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

The Man from Yesterday is a 1949 British second feature ('B')[1] thriller film directed by Oswald Mitchell and starring John Stuart, Henry Oscar and Marie Burke.[2] It was written by John Gilling and made at Southall Studios.

Julius Rickman returns from India to visit his old friend, Gerald Amersley. Before long Rickman comes to dominate the household and appears to harbour a grudge against them. Aunt Doris's former fiancé Cedric Fox's death, tweny-five years earlier had been ruled an accident, but Rickman intimates to her that Fox was murdered by Gerald, her brother, who greatly disliked him. Doris asks Rickman to use his alleged spiritualist gifts to contact Cedric via a séance. Soon afterwards, Doris is found dead. When Rickman accuses Gerald of murdering Doris as well as Cedric, Gerald throws him from a window and kills him. Gerald is tried for Rickman's murder, but there is a twist to the story.

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