Murder at 3am (1955)
A police detective suspects that his sister's boyfriend is a murderer.
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Perfectly adorable
One of the worst movies I've ever seen
This movie tries so hard to be funny, yet it falls flat every time. Just another example of recycled ideas repackaged with women in an attempt to appeal to a certain audience.
One of the film's great tricks is that, for a time, you think it will go down a rabbit hole of unrealistic glorification.
This film seems to have been made in the smallest film studio ever.In one scene there are 4actors crammed in what seems to be a broom cupboard..When they take to a boat on the river there is no attempt at back projection,merely a black background.The story is feeble and poorly constructed and doesn't make a great deal of sense.Dennis Price is unable to salvage anything from it.
MURDER AT 3AM is a short and cheap British crime film, directed by the one and only Francis Searle - a man who made more low budget films than any other, seemingly. I wonder what he would have done with a real budget? This stolid little film is notable only for featuring a lead role for Dennis Price, one of the biggest name stars to appear in one of Searle's films.The story is about a serial killer on the loose who makes a habit of murdering women on the street at precisely 3 am. The police desperately search for patterns and soon discover links to a local shipyard and gradually - very gradually - they work to bringing the murderer to justice.Sadly, MURDER AT 3AM just isn't very good as a crime film. The crime aspects are kept limited and the police procedural stuff is by rote. Price can do nothing with his part and only Leonard Sharp shines as the booze-addled old skipper who helps to solve the crime. The finale features a silly plot twist which is impossible to take seriously.
Dennis Price stars as a Scotland Yard police inspector who with sidekick Sergeant Rex Garner gets an assignment to find out who is doing a series of murders on women coming home from nightclubs in and around three o'clock in the morning. As it is barely an hour we don't get too much in the way of character development and no real great reason why the killer is doing what he's doing. These B films as they would be called here are called 'quota quickies' on the other side of the pond. Accent on the quickie here because this film sure has a hurried quality to it. The producers just wanted to get this one off the assembly line and before the British movie-going public in a big hurry.Complicating things is the fact that Price has a sister played by Peggy Evans who is going out with Philip Savile who comes under suspicion. Of course there's a real good reason why he's under suspicion, but I'll save that in case one wants to see it.I have to warn you that the copy I rented from Amazon has some horrible sound quality. I hope the public when they saw it in the theaters wasn't similarly inconvenienced.
A nice little British thriller with an interesting plot and a good cast but a bit rough round the edges. Look out for (well you can't really miss) the super-sized calendar on the wall in Inspector Lawton's (Dennis Price's) office displaying the date - NOV 11. It was obviously made that way to draw attention to the date, but it's a big TOO big, suggesting that Scotland Yard were all short-sighted. Character actor Leonard Sharp overdoes it somewhat as brandy-guzzling 'Old Skip' who despite his boast that he operates and lives on a boat appears to reside in an old shed. Philip Savile gets to play two parts who are supposed to be half-brothers (not twins) but look exactly the same, except one (the villain) wears a beret - so he must be up to no good! The ending is somewhat rushed, and a bit bizarre, where the bad brother is overpowered the other (even though the brother is wearing handcuffs) and then falls through a window and lands in The Thames but no one bothers to go after him. Perhaps they were planning a sequel?