The Intruder (1953 film)

The Intruder
Theatrical release poster
Directed by Guy Hamilton
Produced by Ivan Foxwell
Written by John Hunter
Robin Maugham
Anthony Squire
Starring Jack Hawkins
George Cole
Dennis Price
Michael Medwin
Music by Francis Chagrin
Cinematography Edward Scaife
Release date
  • 19 October 1953 (1953-10-19)
Running time
84 minutes
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Box office £161,488 (UK)[1]

The Intruder is a 1953 British drama film directed by Guy Hamilton and starring Jack Hawkins, George Cole, Dennis Price and Michael Medwin.[2] The film is based on the 1949 novel by Robin Maugham called The Line on Ginger.

Post-war London is the backdrop including Belgravia, Covent Garden market, Loughborough Junction and Dulwich Hospital.

A contemporary critic commented that the film treated the subject "with intelligence, taste, and a feeling for the medium"; he also wrote "Medwin... gives a brilliant study of a good fellow gone wrong".[3]

Plot

Ex-Colonel, now stockbroker, Wolf Merton (Hawkins) returns home one evening to find it being burgled by an armed intruder. Merton recognises the culprit, Ginger Edwards (Medwin), as a former soldier who had fought courageously under his command in a tank regiment during the Second World War. Merton briefly questions Summers on how he got into a life of crime, but, suspecting Merton has called the police, the burglar makes his escape. Merton sets out to discover why one of his best men became involved in crime after he was de-mobbed. The story unfolds in a sequence of flash-back episodes of events during the war and how they affected, or contrasted with, how each of the main characters fared when they returned to civilian life.[4]

Cast

Soundtrack

The soundtrack was composed by Francis Chagrin, conducted by Muir Mathieson.[4]

References

  1. Vincent Porter, 'The Robert Clark Account', Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television, Vol 20 No 4, 2000 p499
  2. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0048211/
  3. Campbell Dixon, The Daily Telegraph, 17 October 1953, quoted in BFI programme note, 2012.
  4. 1 2 British Film Institute page about The Intruder Retrieved 23 February 2012
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