The Last Man to Hang

The Last Man to Hang? is a 1956 crime film directed by Terence Fisher. It stars Tom Conway and Elizabeth Sellars.[2] The film was produced by John Gossage for Act Films Ltd.[3]

The Last Man to Hang?
Directed byTerence Fisher
Produced byJohn Gossage
Written byGerald Bullett
Ivor Montagu
Max Trell
Maurice Elvey
Based onnovel The Jury by Gerald Bullett[1]
StarringTom Conway
Music byJohn Wooldridge
CinematographyDesmond Dickinson
Edited byPeter Taylor
Production
company
Association of Cinema Technicians (A.C.T.)
Distributed byColumbia Pictures
Release date
  • August 1956 (1956-08) (UK)
Running time
75 min.
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

Plot

Music critic Sir Roderick Strood is having an affair with a beautiful singer, Elizabeth Anders. In a storyline which appears partly in flashback and partly in real time, his wife Daphne refuses to give him a divorce and subsequently tries to shoot herself, but after apparently becoming reconciled to the situation tells Roderick to leave the country with the singer and that she shall see him on the other side. Sir Roderick gives his wife a strong sedative, given him by his mistress, not knowing that his wife's housekeeper, Mrs Tucker, has already given her a sedative. Daphne apparently dies of an overdose, though an early scene of her arrival at hospital has in fact made it clear that she is still alive, and that Mrs Tucker has deliberately mid-identified the body of another woman, brought to hospital at the same time, as Daphne's.

Stopped at the airport Sir Roderick says "I've killed her" and is arrested and charged with murder.

A jury must decide whether Sir Roderick poisoned his wife deliberately, or whether her death was accidental.[4] Several references to the debate about the abolition of capital punishment that was going on in British society in the 1950s are made. One protracted jury room scene recalls the play for television Twelve Angry Men, which had been shown on US TV in 1954. The cast includes several actors who would later become household names.

The trial focuses on the semantic difference between "I've killed her" and "I killed her", and on the question of whether Sir Roderick could have heard Mrs Tucker's voice, warning him not to give his wife a sedative as she had already done so, through a closed door. A demonstration that he might not have heard the housekeeper is enough to convince the jury and he is found not guilty.

Following the trial Sir Roderick returns home, but Mrs Tucker, despite having made every attempt to have Sir Roderick convicted and hanged, now admits that she knew he had not killed his wife as she is not dead. Having heard Roderick confess in the witness box that he still loved his wife and not Elizabeth, Mrs Tucker takes him to his wife (hiding in a large country cottage) where the police, whom Mrs Tucker has tipped off, wait outside to arrest the housekeeper for perjury.

Cast

gollark: Doing so.
gollark: Sure!
gollark: Doubtful.
gollark: I can't tell if you actually somehow conveyed a real optimization idea or are somehow colluding to confuse everyone else.
gollark: They have the same FP64 and FP32 performance.

References

  1. Goble, Alan (1 January 1999). "The Complete Index to Literary Sources in Film". Walter de Gruyter via Google Books.
  2. "The Last Man to Hang? (1956)".
  3. Action! Fifty Years in the Life of a Union. Published: 1983 (UK). Publisher: ACTT. ISBN 0 9508993 0 5. ACT Films Limited - Ralph Bond p81 (producer listed as John Gossage)
  4. "The Last Man to Hang (1956) - Terence Fisher - Synopsis, Characteristics, Moods, Themes and Related - AllMovie".


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.