Face the Music | |
Director: | Terence Fisher |
Producer: | Michael Carreras |
Screenplay: | Ernest Borneman |
Based On: | Face the Music by Ernest Borneman |
Starring: | Alex Nicol Eleanor Summerfield Paul Carpenter |
Music: | Ivor Slaney Kenny Baker |
Cinematography: | Walter J. Harvey |
Editing: | Maurice Rootes |
Studio: | Hammer Film Productions |
Distributor: | Exclusive Films Lippert Pictures (US) |
Runtime: | 84 minutes |
Country: | United Kingdom |
Language: | English |
Face the Music (U.S. title: The Black Glove) is a 1954 British crime drama film directed by Terence Fisher, and starring Alex Nicol, Eleanor Summerfield and Paul Carpenter.[1] [2] It was released in the United States by Lippert Pictures.
An American trumpet player in Britain is accused of murdering a beautiful blues singer.[3]
It was produced by Hammer Films and shot at Bray Studios outside London with sets designed by the art director J. Elder Wills.
The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "Though this highly involved and improbable affair is given a contain gloss by slick camera work and competent direction, nothing could bring an essentially unconvincing story to life, The denizens of Archer Street and Soho are well portrayed, but Alex Nicol seems uneasy in the leading role. Some shots of the show at the Palladium are interesting, and the music, particularly Kenny Baker's trumpet playing, is very effective."[4]
Allmovie wrote: "Not one of Fisher's more rousing films."
The Radio Times called it an "adequate mystery."[5]