The Golden Link Explained

The Golden Link
Director:Charles Saunders
Producer:Guido Coen
Screenplay:Allan MacKinnon
Starring:André Morell
Patrick Holt
Thea Gregory
Jack Watling
Music:Eric Spear
Cinematography:Harry Waxman
Editing:Jack Slade
Studio:Kenilworth Film Productions
Distributor:Archway Film Distributors
Runtime:83 minutes
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English

The Golden Link is a 1954 British police drama film directed by Charles Saunders, starring André Morell, Patrick Holt, Thea Gregory and Jack Watling. It was produced by Guido Coen under his Kenilworth Film Productions, featuring a screenplay by Allan MacKinnon and soundtrack by Eric Spear. The story concerns the death of a young woman, having fallen to her demise inside an apartment building. A policeman neighbour, Superintendent Blake, conducts an unofficial investigation, which initially seems to implicate his own daughter in a murder plot.

Filmed at Riverside Film Studios in London, the picture was one of several second feature thrillers made in partnership by Saunders and Coen. Restricted by a meagre budget and minor distributors in Archway, production of The Golden Link still stood out for its rich cast and cinematography by Harry Waxman.

The film was generally well received after its release on 24 August 1954. Contemporary reviews broadly characterised it as an interesting and suspenseful whodunit, in spite of the absence of international cast members. More modern assessments have been equally critical regarding a perceived lack of action, although this too has been matched by recent reviews' approval of the plot, particularly toward its beginning.

Plot

In London, a young woman plummets four floors to her death into the hallway of an apartment building also occupied by Superintendent Blake, a police officer. Initially deemed a suicide, Blake suspects foul play but soon finds himself removed from the case. Notwithstanding, he calmly continues to investigate in an unofficial capacity, searching for clues and interviewing persons of interest. Blake eventually narrows his search to two suspects: the victim's husband, Terry Maguire, and his own daughter, Joan, whom happens to be in love with the former. Learning that she had tried to convince Maguire of divorcing the victim, he deduces both to have had ample motive and opportunity to commit murder. Despite his suspicions, Blake finally discovers neither to have been responsible for the crime, Joan having been framed by another neighbour, the true killer.[1] [2] [3] [4]

Cast

The film's cast comprises:[2] [4] [5]

Production

The Golden Link was produced by Guido Coen, who under his Kenilworth Film Productions made "about a dozen" second feature thrillers with Charles Saunders between 1954 and 1961.[6] Of these pictures, typically made on a £13,000 budget, Coen stated "style was of secondary consideration", viewing them solely as a means to make a living.[7] While Coen and Saunders made some of these films for major distributors, including Rank, Pathé and Columbia, The Golden Link was instead acquired by a minor company, Archway.[8]

Contrary to its unremarkable financing and distribution, The Golden Link nonetheless harboured "co-feature aspirations" as a consequence of its popular cast (especially Morell, Holt and the debuting Landi), the cinematography of Harry Waxman, as well as through filming at Riverside Film Studios in Hammersmith, London.[9] Wilfred Arnold designed the set at Riverside as the film's art director, accompanying a script by Allan MacKinnon, his first of three under Saunders,[10] and music by Eric Spear; the picture was edited by Jack Slade.[4]

Critical response

Contemporary reviews of The Golden Link were generally favourable. The critic F. Maurice Speed, published in Film Review, commended the picture as an "excellent, modest British whodunit",[11] a view shared in-part by Punch, which while deeming it "a quite ordinary whodunit", nevertheless argued that "there are points about it that make it more interesting to discuss than many a much better and more unusual film".[12] Moderate praise was similarly awarded by Variety, which labelled the film as a "neatly contrived whodunit with sufficient suspense to hold interest", highlighting Saunders' direction in particular. The reviewer nonetheless remained critical regarding the film's lack of foreign talent.[13]

A more recent appraisal by the film historian Steve Chibnall and the film critic Brian McFarlane found The Golden Link, alongside The Hornet's Nest (1955) and Behind the Headlines (1956), to not be "among Saunders' best",[10] "suffer[ing] from an excess of talk and too little action".[14] Conversely, a retrospective review from TV Guide found the film to be a "well-crafted mystery", giving it 3/5 stars.[1] Furthermore, writing for AllMovie, the media historian Hal Erickson notes "a spectacularly violent start" in his assessment of the picture, awarding 2.5/5 stars.[3]

References

Citations

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Golden Link. TV Guide. 29 April 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200428235026/https://www.tvguide.com/movies/the-golden-link/review/124775/. 28 April 2020.
  2. Book: Gifford. Denis. Denis Gifford. 2000. The British Film Catalogue: Fiction Film, 1895–1994. 1. 3. London. Routledge. 617. 978-1-31-774063-6.
  3. [Hal Erickson (author)|Erickson, Hal]
  4. Web site: The Golden Link (1954). British Film Institute (BFI). 29 April 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200428235557/https://www.bfi.org.uk/films-tv-people/4ce2b6ab50ce1. 28 April 2020.
  5. Web site: The Golden Link (1954) – Cast and Crew. AllMovie. 2 May 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200502153105/https://www.allmovie.com/movie/the-golden-link-v93508/cast-crew. 2 May 2020.
  6. Book: Chibnall. Steve. McFarlane. Brian. The British "B" Film. 2009. London. Bloomsbury Publishing. 127–28. 978-1-84-457574-9.
  7. Chibnall & McFarlane 2009, p. 129.
  8. Chibnall & McFarlane 2009, p. 127.
  9. Chibnall & McFarlane 2009, pp. 128, 167.
  10. Chibnall & McFarlane 2009, p. 164.
  11. Book: Speed. F. Maurice. F. Maurice Speed. 1955. Film Review, 1954–55. London. Macdonald & Co.. 130. 56347307.
  12. Book: Muggeridge. Malcolm. Malcolm Muggeridge. 1954. Punch. 227. London. Punch Publications Ltd.. 299. 607373359.
  13. Book: 1983. Variety's Film Reviews: 1954–1958. 9. New York. R. R. Bowker. 143. 489584796.
  14. Chibnall & McFarlane 2009, p. 128.