Penny and the Pownall Case

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Penny and the Pownall Case
Directed bySlim Hand
Written byWilliam Fairchild
Based onstory by William Fairchild
Produced byJohn Croydon
StarringRalph Michael
Peggy Evans
Production
company
Highbury Productions
Distributed byGeneral Film Distributors
Release date
1948
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

Penny and the Pownall Case is a 1948 British second feature mystery film, directed by Slim Hand and starring Ralph Michael, Peggy Evans, Diana Dors and Christopher Lee.[1]

It was the first featured role for Diana Dors, the second female lead, and Christopher Lee, the villain. The two of them, and star Peggy Evans, were members of Rank's "Charm School", The Company of Youth.

The music was by Elisabeth Lutyens, making her the first female British composer to score a feature film.[2]

Premise[]

A model helps a Scotland Yard detective to hunt down a gang of criminals smuggling Nazi war criminals out of Europe. Cartoonist Jonathan Blair hides secret messages in his comic strips.

Cast[]

Production[]

It was the first film made by Highbury Productions, a company that belonged to the Rank Group of companies. Its aim was to make 50 minute "curtain raisers" for Rank's features.[3]

According to Christopher Lee, "only the technicians, working with a grim sense of purpose, were pros in the proper sense. Everybody other function, from direction to walk on parts, was up for grabs."[4] Director Slim Hand was normally a production manager at Ealing.

Reception[]

Bob Monkhouse wrote in his memoirs that when he saw the film in the cinema he thought it was "really bad" but was impressed by Diana Dors. "It was her energy that at first attracted me," he wrote. "Her acting was raw but promising and her vitality made me remember her afterwards as if her part of the screen had been in colour."[5] Filmink said the "film was the first of many occasions where Dors would outshine the female lead, and make one wonder why she did not get a bigger part."[6]

Christopher Lee called it "a truly grisly free for all"[7]... a "Z feature".[8] He says the cast were forced to watch the film being previewed and he found the experience extremely embarrassing. It was the first time he died on screen.[9]

Notes[]

  • Lee, Christopher (1999). Tall, Dark and Gruesome. Midnight Marque.

References[]

  1. ^ BFI.org
  2. ^ David Huckvale, Hammer Film Scores and the Musical Avant-Garde, p. 54
  3. ^ "LATEST FILM NEWS FROM ABROAD". The Sun (11966). New South Wales, Australia. 3 June 1948. p. 19 (LATE FINAL EXTRA). Retrieved 22 July 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
  4. ^ Lee p 108
  5. ^ Monkhouse, Bob (1993). Crying with laughter : my life story. Century. p. 83.
  6. ^ Vagg, Stephen (7 September 2020). "A Tale of Two Blondes: Diana Dors and Belinda Lee". Filmink.
  7. ^ Lee p 107
  8. ^ Lee p 108
  9. ^ Lee p 108

External links[]

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