The Violent Enemy Explained

The Violent Enemy
Director:Don Sharp
Producer:Wilfred Eades
executive
William Gell
Based On:novel A Candle for the Dead by Hugh Marlow (Jack Higgins)
Starring:Tom Bell
Susan Hampshire
Ed Begley
Noel Purcell
Music:John Scott (as Patrick John Scott)
Cinematography:Alan Hume
Editing:Thom Noble
Distributor:Monarch Film Corporation
London Independent Producers
Studio:Trio Film
Group W Films
Runtime:94 minutes
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English
Budget:£250,000[1]

The Violent Enemy (also known as Came the Hero) is a 1968 film directed by Don Sharp and starring Tom Bell, Susan Hampshire, Ed Begley, and Noel Purcell.[2] It was written by Edmund Ward based on the 1966 novel A Candle for the Dead by Hugh Marlow (as Jack Higgins).

The plot concerns an IRA plot to blow up a British power station.[3] [4]

Premise

IRA bomb expert Sean Rogan escapes from prison, and is reluctantly recruited into a scheme by IRA leader Colum O'More to blow up a British electronics factory back in Ireland. Rogan wants a peaceful life but O'More insists.

Rogan is given Hannah Costello to assist him. Inspector Sullivan is suspicious of Rogan.

Cast

Original novel

The film was based on the 1966 novel A Candle for the Dead by Hugh Marlow (better known as Jack Higgins). The Observer called it "fast and exciting".[5] The sale of the movie rights enabled Higgins to quit teaching and write full time. [6]

The book would subsequently be reissued in 1969 as The Violent Enemy by Jack Higgins.[7]

Production

Don Sharp had previously worked with the producers on Taste of Excitement (which would be released after this film). He says the original title of the film was Candle for the Dead.[8] The title was changed to Came the Hero when filming began in Waterford in October 1968 and was finished by December.[1] [9] Sharp says it had a "nice cast" with Begley being "marvellous... it was a very good movie to make. I loved filming in Ieland. Tom Bell was marvellous".[8]

Release

Sharp says "everyone was delighted" with the film but just as it was released in 1969, IRA activity started up again causing the film to be pulled.[8]

Critical reception

The Monthly Film Bulletin called it a "moderately interesting if not particularly convincing melodrama".[10] Sky Movies described it as "one of only a handful of British films to deal with the troubles in Ireland. Played as a melodrama, the film is efficiently directed by action specialist Don Sharp. Tom Bell has the right air of disillusionment about him as the IRA man who's learned moderation in a British jail".[11]

The Radio Times noted, "it's efficiently made, if unsurprising, and familiar American actor Ed Begley is worth watching as the fanatical Irish mastermind behind the scheme."[12]

The Independent said "The sum of all these substantial parts is less than a masterpiece. Too much of a hint of 'Oirish' accents among English actors. Too much talk of The Cause. Too little movement in the clock above Leary's bar, which is forever stuck at seven minutes past nine. Still it fills an idle hour and a half well enough."[13]

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Filming starts in Waterford. Was shot in Ardmore Studios, Bray, Co. Wicklow and on location in Enniscorthy, Co. Wexford. The Irish Times. Oct 12, 1968. 8.
  2. Web site: The Violent Enemy . 18 August 2024 . British Film Institute Collections Search.
  3. https://web.archive.org/web/20120724211842/http://explore.bfi.org.uk/4ce2b6bfada21 The Violent Enemy
  4. Stephen. Vagg. Unsung Aussie Filmmakers: Don Sharp – A Top 25. Filmink. July 27, 2019.
  5. CRIMERATION Richardson, Maurice. The Observer 14 Aug 1966: 18.
  6. News: Jack Higgins: Best-selling author of The Eagle Has Landed. Independent. Phil. Davison. 17 April 2022.
  7. News: Evening Chronicle. 1 October 1969. 5. Jack's all right.
  8. Sharp . Don . Teddy Darvas and Alan Lawson . Don Sharp Side 5. 2 November 1993 . British Entertainment History Project . London . 14 July 2021.
  9. Aznavour Signs 2-Year PactMartin, Betty. Los Angeles Times 12 Oct 1968: c9.
  10. VIOLENT ENEMY, TheMonthly Film Bulletin; London Vol. 36, Iss. 420, (Jan 1, 1969): 178.
  11. Web site: The Violent Enemy.
  12. Web site: The Violent Enemy. John Gammon. RadioTimes.
  13. News: Independent. Forgotten films... in familiar settings. 11 October 2011.