I had never heard of this, despite it being a Powell/Pressburger production (the three films they made before this were the murderer's row of: A Matter of Life and Death, Black Narcissus and The Red Shoes - all glorious technicolor, whereas this is a black and white number), and it turns out there's a good reason for that, because... well, it's not very good. I cannot recommend this to anyone, except maybe for two segments. One is a kind of fever-dream-sequence where the main character hallucinates his furniture becoming huge and looming over him, which is gloriously silly, and the other is the climax of the film, where he defuses an explosive device,
that is genuinely very tense. The rest of the film was frankly tedious. It seems to be a kind of propaganda film (a bit late, in 1949!) praising the efforts of the boffins behind the scene who helped unglamorously but essentially in the war effort (meanwhile Alan Turing was probably being chemically castrated at that very moment). The main character is a, frankly peevish Sammy Rice (well played, I will grudgingly allow, by the dishy (pipe-smoking) David Farrar) who is peevish because he lost a foot in the war and now has a tin one that causes him constant pain, for which the "dope" that the doctors give him appears to do nothing. This drives him to whisky, despite the entreaties of his bartender "Knucksie" (Sid James,
looking seemingly exactly the same in the late 40s as he did in the Carry On films) (you should hear the sneering way Sammy says "Knucksie" when he's got surly drunk) and his long suffering love Susan,
played saintlily by Kathleen Byron, which in itself is distracting, because this is how I think of her:
Most of the film alternates between office politics
(Sammy is the brains of an outfit run by blowhard RB Waring (Jack Hawkins) with whom he is constantly bickering) and scenes of Sammy moping and Susan trying to cheer him up, and Sammy criticizing himself for dragging Susan down, and Susan saying isn't that for me to judge and so on. Meanwhile the interesting part of the film, which takes up frustratingly little screen time, is that a new kind of German weapon has started cropping up all over England and Wales (cue some very scenic shots), about the size of a bulky flashlight (I was interested to note that they called them "flashlights" rather than torches), which keeps blowing up the people who pick them up. The mystery is why they don't blow up before then, and what triggers them, but they keep blowing up before the boffins can get to look at them. Anyway, the film drags on until Sammy drives Susan away
(she even takes her picture from his frame and her cat), he gets raging drunk, and then the friendly soldier Captain Stuart (played by Celestial Toymaker Michael Gough)
who first introduced Sammy to the concept, calls up and says they've acquired two of the things and can he come down to Portland Bill. Despite Sammy's entreaties Stuart insists on trying to defuse one of them himself, with predictable results. Cue the tense scene where Sammy defuses the device (dictating what he's doing over a funny strap-on telephone to a very pretty female soldier
(Renée Ascherson, aunt of renowned journalist Neal Ascherson) who was doing the same for Stuart when... well, you know). Anyway, Sammy comes out of it smelling of roses and gets to run his own section of the army, and comes home to find Susan's picture back in the frame and the cat back on its mat,
and a refilled bottle of whisky waiting for him. All's well. There's also a minor subplot about a stuttering Corporal who's great with fuses but whose wife is unfaithful and everyone knows it. I will say that it's possibly the most convincing stutter I've ever heard (handily beating Michael Palin's) - so kudos to Cyril Cusack. Overall: just for Powell/Pressburger completists, or those with less stony hearts than me, methinks.
Oh yes, one oddity: they appear to have filmed at Stonehenge, and fired off a big old gun there. Those were the days.

























































