River Patrol (1948) Poster

(1948)

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5/10
Made In A Broom Cupboard
malcolmgsw20 January 2015
This film was made by Hammer at Marylebone Studios.Clearly these studios were about the size of a broom cupboard.In one scene set in a detectives room one of the actors actually has to come in sideways in order to sit at a desk.The leading man is John Blithe,here cast as a river policeman,normally playing spivs.He is on the case of a nylon smuggling gang led by the redoubtable Wally Patch.In one scene Patch stabs someone with his swordstick.Only we don't see the victim as the studio is to small to get everyone in view.The climactic fight between Blithe and Patch at the end is too funny to be true.I wonder if they had a fight co ordinator in those days.As entertaining as a low budget film like this could expect to be.
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3/10
Brook Shields
southdavid22 September 2021
Another one endured for the excellent "House of Hammer" podcast, this time the 1948 film (I say film, it's only about 40 minutes) "River Patrol", which is perhaps the most inexplicable movie that Hammer has produced so far.

Robbie Robinson (John Blythe) is part of River Patrol, a post-war Police department patrolling the coasts and rivers dealing with smugglers, gangsters and other water-based shenanigans. Charged with infiltrating a gang smuggling nylon tights into the UK, Robbie and Jean Nichols (Lorna Dean) pose as alcohol smugglers and supply booze to The Guv (Wally Patch) and his gambling club.

"River Patrol" is pretty awful, often hilariously so. Hammily acted, with yet more the of the terrible fight scenes that we saw in the Dick Barton series, but at least the Dick Barton's had a story to them... in one case, a pretty good one. Here, our heroes wander about until they find their way into a gang, not necessarily "the" gang, but one nevertheless. Robbie tries to sneak into a base of operations, gets knocked out, wakes up, scuffles with the head gangster, that's about it. There are plot points, such as they murder of another member of the patrol in the opening scene, that appear to be establishing story beats to pay of later, but either then were lost in the edit, or just filmed to pad out the run time to make it to "B" picture territory.

The sound recording (at least on the version on Youtube) is awful, several lines are lost but to scratchy microphones, but then also to a generic music score that plays under most of the film and drowns bits of it out.

I mean, having said all that, and laid out it's many flaws, it was obviously made cheap, very cheap so perhaps picking on it is mean spirited. It is also, as I said, at times unintentionally hilarious. I'll never watch it again but I might remember it for a while.
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5/10
Early Hammer cheapie
Leofwine_draca25 February 2018
Warning: Spoilers
RIVER PATROL is a cheap, short thriller from the team at Hammer Films. It's a far cry from their later horror fare or even their thrillers of the 1950s. John Blythe, who usually plays an unpleasant character in the likes of HOLIDAY CAMP, plays a river detective on the hunt for a gang of tights smugglers (yes, you heard that right). This is as cheap as they come and the only good thing about it is that the running time, under 50 minutes, is so brief as to mean that the pace is very fast so that this doesn't have much chance to get boring. It plays out as a police procedural for the most part, with a few perilous moments and a turn from the reliable Wally Patch playing a bad guy for a change. It only really picks up in the last ten minutes or so.
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Entertaining little crime flick from UK
searchanddestroy-19 November 2014
Warning: Spoilers
A rare gem this crime film from the other side of the channel. Never heard of the director, the actors and the movie itself. The classic, foreseeable, forgettable story of a Young cop fighting against gangsters in the docks of London, smugglers, racketers. Nothing really impressive here, but some characters are quite interesting. For instance the evil bad guy, the gangsters' lead. The climax sounds cheap but is still good, for such a tiny production. In resume, not bad, for this rare gem from the years just after the war. The Blitz; but we don't see many London settings here, the post war London famous settings; see what I mean. The London after the Blitz...As we see in so many movies.
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1/10
Worth Seeing For Its Badness
boblipton13 October 2019
There's a gun battle on the Thames and John Blythe's assistant is killed. But there something far more dire; the Home Office is upset because someone is selling nylons cheap! So Blythe and assistant Lorna Dean tramp the Docklands until they wind up at Wally Patch's gambling club, where they sell him a few cases of bootleg whisky.

Patch's real racket is buying a lot of stockings in France, killing the seller with his sword-cane and tossing the body overboard. Meanwhile, Miss Dean is kidnapped and stored right next to a telephone, where she can call her boss to rescue her and Blythe, who is knocked around by Patch.

Not only are there obviously mismatched shots; not only is the score bucolic Romantic music (with boogie-woogie for the gambling club) played off scratchy wax cylinders until the 38-minute mark of this 45-minute movie, but this seems to have been shot in Hammer's legendary Marleybone Studio, where each stage was about the size of a bedsit, but.... well, it's worse than even that.

Stunningly awful.
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