David Sumner has been paroled and is living at a halfway house, slowly getting his life back in order. However, when a maniac begins attacking girls at a deserted patch near council flats, suspicion falls on him, and everything he does seems suspicious.
The pressures on Summer and his resentful reaction is the main driving force of this story. It also makes its points about society's unwillingness to give him a chance; there's a scene with Olga Linda as his mother, in which she rejects him utterly that is quite telling, it's a good story, although the constant surliness of Sumner's acting, while understandable, becomes wearisome in its constancy.
The pressures on Summer and his resentful reaction is the main driving force of this story. It also makes its points about society's unwillingness to give him a chance; there's a scene with Olga Linda as his mother, in which she rejects him utterly that is quite telling, it's a good story, although the constant surliness of Sumner's acting, while understandable, becomes wearisome in its constancy.