6/10
Seen on Pittsburgh's Chiller Theater only in 1969
14 May 2020
1960's "No Love for Johnnie" was a straight political drama and a change of pace for director Ralph Thomas and producer Betty Box, becoming increasingly identified with comedies like "Doctor in the House" and its sequels. The film was adapted from the novel by Wilfred Feinburgh, a member of Parliament himself who died in an auto accident before its 1959 publication, Peter Finch playing Johnnie Byrne, reelected to Parliament with a greater majority for his Labour Party, quickly becoming disillusioned when passed over for a Cabinet position. This leads to a frankly far less interesting love affair with a young model half his age (Mary Peach), conveniently showing up after the departure of his Communist wife (Rosalie Crutchley). Add to this Billie Whitelaw as the upstairs neighbor pining for his affections, and a sinister looking Donald Pleasence as Roger Renfrew, leading an attempt to undermine Geoffrey Keen's Prime Minister by selecting Johnnie as the one to blow the whistle on a Middle Eastern coup before events play out in Britain's favor. Had the MP's predictably miserable love life not taken precedence over his political aspirations it might have made for something quite special, but it did earn Finch his third BAFTA Award, plus the Silver Bear for Best Actor at Berlin's 11th International Film Festival. The list of familiar faces features longtime veterans such as Dennis Price as a knowing photographer, Stanley Holloway, Mervyn Johns, George Rose, and Peter Sallis, to newcomers Mary Peach and an unbilled Oliver Reed, just off his starring debut in Hammer's "The Curse of the Werewolf," spotted at a party with a basket covering his head at the half hour mark.
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