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poster of The Interrupted Journey
Rating: 6/10 by 16 users

The Interrupted Journey (1949)

When John North, a budding author, pulls the communication cord of a late night train that is taking him away on a weekend with his publishers wife, he sets in motion a series of events that lead to a train crash, a murder and a police man hunt, but all is not what it seems.

Directing:
  • Daniel Birt
  • Cecil R. Foster Kemp
Writing:
  • Michael Pertwee
Stars:
Release Date: Tue, Oct 11, 1949

Rating: 6/10 by 16 users

Alternative Title:

Country:
United Kingdom
Language:
English
Runtime: 01 hour 20 minutes
Budget: $0
Revenue: $0

Plot Keyword: murder, british noir

Richard Todd
John North
Christine Norden
Susan Wilding
Tom Walls
Mr. Clayton
Alexander Gauge
Jerves Wilding
Ralph Truman
Inspector Waterson
Vida Hope
Miss Marchmont
Dora Bryan
the waitress
Vincent Ball
the first workman
Jack Vyvyan
the second workman
Elsie Wagstaff
Wilding's maid
Dora Sevening
Mrs. Wilding senior
Nigel Neilson
Sergeant Sanger
Arthur Lane
Constable Cowley
Alan Gordon
the ticket inspector
Hope Matthews
elderly gentleman
Roger Moore
the soldier in Paddington café
Arnold Ridley
Mr. Saunders
Gwynneth Vaughan
the girl with the soldier

John Chard

20 Killed, 31 Injured! The Interrupted Journey is directed by Daniel Birt and written by Michael Pertwee. It stars Richard Todd, Valerie Hobson, Tom Walls and Ralph Truman. Music is by Stanley Black and cinematography by Erwin Hillier. To Stop Train In Case Of Emergency Pull Down The Chain. Penalty For Improper Use £5. That's a woman in a million. Very tidy Brit noir this one. The story is a bit hokey as it enters Twilight Zone territories, but the twists, turns and mystery quotient keep it lively to hold the attention. The low budget is never a problem for Birt, who aided by the excellent Hillier, brings a feverish realm to the story by way of canted angles, shadow play and hazes, while certain images (shapes of doorways etc) are cunningly teasing the audience about what is going on. Cast are very strong to round this out as more than worth the time of the Brit noir film fan. 7/10


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