Someone at the Door | |
Director: | Herbert Brenon |
Producer: | Walter C. Mycroft |
Based On: | the play Someone at the Door by Campbell Christie & Dorothy Christie[1] |
Starring: | Aileen Marson Billy Milton Noah Beery Edward Chapman |
Cinematography: | Bryan Langley |
Editing: | David Cousland |
Studio: | British International Pictures |
Runtime: | 73 minutes[2] |
Country: | United Kingdom |
Language: | English |
Someone at the Door is a 1936 British drama film directed by Herbert Brenon and starring Aileen Marson, Billy Milton, Noah Beery, John Irwin and Edward Chapman.[3] A journalist comes up with a scheme to boost his career by inventing a fake murder but soon becomes embroiled in trouble when a real killing takes place.[4] It is based on a successful West End play by Campbell Christie and his wife Dorothy Christie.[5]
When penniless Sally (Aileen Marson) inherits a decrepit country manor, formerly her childhood home, she moves in with her younger brother Ronald (Billy Milton). An ambitious young journalist, Ronald comes up with an outlandish scheme to get his first big story. He plans to hide Sally in the house, to fake her death, and then get himself arrested for her murder. When Sally suddenly reappears at his trial, it will prove his innocence, and leave Ronald to supply his paper with an exclusive story. However, the siblings uncover a real mystery when they become mixed up with jewel thieves, whose loot is hidden in their house.
The Radio Times preferred the film's 1950 remake, "although, in this case, that's not saying much, as the 1950 version of Campbell and Dorothy Christie's old theatrical chestnut wasn't very good either. Contrived only goes part way to describing this creaky thriller";[6] while Infernal Cinema described the film as "a little like a game of Cluedo come to life," and appreciated, "A short yet entertaining thriller from the thirties," concluding, "Brenon is sometimes under appreciated in the history of cinema, Someone at the Door is a brisk reminder of his talent."[7]