You Can't Escape (1957) Poster

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6/10
Not bad, but too polite
XhcnoirX29 June 2017
Author Robert Urquhart and heiress Noelle Middleton fall head over heels in love. After they announce their engagement Urquhart's ex- girlfriend shows up and tells him she's pregnant with his baby. He ends up killing her in a freak accident. When he tries to dispose of the body Middleton catches him, but after some convincing agrees to help him, and they bury her in some private woods owned by Middleton's family. However journalist Peter Reynolds, always on the lookout for a spicy story, and the dead girl's doctor Guy Rolfe, throw a spanner in the works.

A decent Britnoir that could've been better. Urquhart plays a man whose life spirals out of control after an unfortunate accident. But you never feel too sorry for him, he's too selfish and keeps telling Middleton to just forget the dead ex ever happened. Because of that event Middleton starts to see the lesser side of Urquhart and is having doubts about the marriage, while Rolfe starts to take a romantic interest in her. Meanwhile shady journalist Reynolds is also not beyond receiving bribes for not writing his story, as he can connect Urquhart to the dead girl and even figures out where he's buried her. They give good performances, but it's all too posh and polite, too stiff-upper-lip, even for a British movie. Esp Rolfe looks like he has his suits pressed while wearing them.

For both director Wilfred Eames and cinematographer Norman Warwick this would be their first movie and they do a nice job. They keep things moving at a brisk pace and there are some nice shots sprinkled throughout. As with the performances, it could've used more spunk and a higher sense of doom and dread, but all in all, not a bad way to spend 75 minutes.
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8/10
Engrossing tale of a Mr Everyman being drawn into crime
crossrad14 September 2015
This film is based on a theme I find intriguing, in which someone ordinary, in this case a young author, is drawn into crime through events. You can continue to debate with yourself throughout the film whether Peter Darwin was really a criminal; would he have received a fair trial in 1950's Britain; if he had gone to the police would he have been believed. Right through the film new facets are revealed about the characters Kay Murch and Peter Darwin as the plot presents them with successive dilemmas. The film stands up well even after the change in public attitudes to morality over the last sixty years, yet it is also interesting to see the attitudes of the time revealed through the reactions of the bit players.

I would say the acting was very good from all players, with camera- work and lighting presenting it very well. Sound is good, with the excellent diction you expect in films of that age. Well worth a watch to see the locations of the time in London and in the countryside, as well as an absorbing crime drama told from the perspective of the people involved, not the police investigating.
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7/10
The escapist.
morrison-dylan-fan13 April 2020
Warning: Spoilers
For Easter I started searching for a movie that me and my dad could both enjoy over the holiday. Reading reviews in a old issue of UK movie magazine Empire, I read a very good one for a British Film Noir on DVD,leading to me escaping.

View on the film:

Presenting two different aspect ratio versions of the title, Network present a flawless transfer of a crisp image and clean soundtrack.

Initiating a survival of the fittest after Darwin's accidental killing in their adaptation of Alan Kennington's novel, the screenplay by Doreen Montgomery and Robert hall unveil a thrilling Film Noir web, spun by Darwin pulling his fiancé March into help him spin alibis once the locals start to notice that a woman has gone missing. Hanging the chance for Darwin to get away with it all in court, the writers recoil Darwin into a desire to settle a old score, which backfires to a corner he can't escape from.

Keeping everyone away from entering Darwin's personal space, director Wilfred Eades and debut cinematographer Norman Warwick brew a rich Film Noir atmosphere in the brisk, crisp countryside Darwin lives in being balanced with lingering shadows casts across panning shots tracking Darwin's attempt to hide the proof. Oddly resembling David Cameron, Robert Urquhart gives a excellent turn as Darwin, whose upper class life is used by Urquhart to give him a gentlemanly façade, whilst getting his hands dirty as Darwin tries to find a way to escape.
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6/10
Blackmail is a dangerous game
malcolmgsw23 September 2018
Warning: Spoilers
So says Peter Reynolds in his narration on the trailer.He should know,he's played enough of them in his time.He turns the screw very effectively on Robert Urquhart.Urquhart plays a very duplicitous character who is partly to blame for the death of a former lover in a car accident.He doesn't go to the police,if he did there would be no story.He buried her in the wood owned by his latest lover. It all spirals out of control from there.I always enjoy watching Peter Reynolds.
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5/10
"No one knew her. No one cared"
hwg1957-102-26570425 April 2021
Warning: Spoilers
A newly engaged man writer Peter Darwin accidentally kills his previous lover who threatens his new relationship. Instead of informing the police he tries to cover up the death. This leads to further complications until he has to commit murder to try and stay safe. A decent enough film but rather underpowered dramatically. The actors are adequate but needed a bit more oomph. Standing out for me was Peter Reynolds as the inquisitive reporter who is suitably smooth and slimy. The great Sam Kydd appears briefly.

There is pleasant location shooting (the English countryside, The River Thames) that adds to the too genteel atmosphere. No film noir here.
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