Dead Men are Dangerous | |
Director: | Harold French |
Producer: | Warwick Ward |
Based On: | novel Hidden by H.C. Armstrong[1] |
Music: | John Reynders (uncredited) |
Cinematography: | Ernest Palmer |
Editing: | E. Richards |
Studio: | Welwyn Studios |
Distributor: | Pathé Pictures International (UK), StudioCanal (UK) |
Runtime: | 69 minutes |
Country: | United Kingdom |
Language: | English |
Dead Men are Dangerous is a 1939 British noir crime film directed by Harold French and starring Robert Newton, Betty Lynne, John Warwick, and Peter Gawthorne. It was released in the U.S. as Dangerous Masquerade.[2] Its plot concerns an unsuccessful writer who is wrongly accused of a murder.[3]
Penniless and debt ridden writer Aylmer Franklyn happens upon a dead man lying under the branch of a tree, apparently killed during a violent storm. Swapping clothes and identities with the corpse seems like a way out of his troubles, and Franklyn even attends his own inquest; but little does he know the man had a criminal history and he soon finds the police on his trail.
In a contemporary review, The Leicester Daily Mercury found "Fast moving action, a goodly sequence of thrills, and some splendid acting by Robert Newton, characterises Dead Men are Dangerous, a film with a clever plot and a strong taste of the mysterious";[4] while more recently, Vintage 45 wrote, "No great acting to speak of and no real depth to the story but it’s fun to watch it all unfold. Don’t expect anything exceptional and you’ll probably like it."[5]