At the Stroke of Nine | |
Director: | Lance Comfort |
Producer: | Harry Booth Michael Deeley Jon Penington |
Starring: | Patricia Dainton Stephen Murray Patrick Barr Dermot Walsh |
Cinematography: | Gerald Gibbs |
Music: | Edwin Astley |
Studio: | Towers of London Productions |
Distributor: | Grand National (UK) |
Runtime: | 71 minutes |
Country: | United Kingdom |
Language: | English |
Budget: | £20,000[1] |
At the Stroke of Nine is a 1957 British crime film directed by Lance Comfort and starring Patricia Dainton, Stephen Murray, Patrick Barr and Dermot Walsh.[2] A female journalist who is kidnapped by a madman who forces her to write articles about him and threatens to kill her.
When reporter Sally Bryant chases a major scoop, she is captured by concert pianist Stephen Garrett, who says he will murder her within the next five days. He forces her to send daily reports of her ordeal to her newspaper. The typeface of the reports gives a clue to the police, who reach Garrett's house in time to prevent him from strangling Sally. Garrett falls out of a window to his death.
The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "This implausible melodrama has little to recommend it. The villain has no virtues and the hero no vices; the heroine registers suitable cold terror: and the script calls for little more from them."[3]
TV Guide wrote, "the frantic search for the loonie by police offers some interesting scenes with fair suspense."[4]