A-ha ha, it’s Burl, here to review an English country house
mystery story – with a difference! Here the English country house has been requisitioned
and repurposed as a hospital “in the emergency of war,” and the mystery is set
during the Blitz, with bombs falling unpredictably here and there! And the
suspects are all doctors and nurses, ha ha!
The film in question is called Green For Danger, and it’s a terrific pickler of a picture, filled
with marvelous voices and entertaining performances, and beautiful inky-black
photography and cracking dialogue! The performance I most enjoyed was that of
Alastair Sim, playing the detective on the case, Inspector Cockerill, “of
Scotland Yard, I’m afraid,” who was also given the best dialogue!
The story tells, in one long, virtually uninterrupted
flashback, of a murder done one August day in 1944, when doodlebugs were
raining out of the skies and jury-rigged hospitals in expropriated manor houses
dotted the land! The victim is a postman, who dies in an operation, and when a
lovestruck theatre sister declares his death anything but an accident, she
herself is summarily slaughtered in a scene that would not have been out of place
in a Brian De Palma picture! Clearly, Inspector Cockerill tells us, the
perpetrator is one of the five other people present in the operating room the
morning of the postman’s death!
Inspector Cockerill goes about his investigation with an
hilarious indelicacy! Sim tries a little physical comedy too, some one-man
knockabout, but mainly relies on his marvelous staccato delivery and his
constant knowing grin! It’s a highly entertaining performance! Surrounding him,
the suspects, are a gallery of good actors, like Leo “Endless Night” Genn, playing a self-satisfied cocksman, and Trevor
Howard from Von Ryan’s Express as the
tetchy anesthesiologist! There’s a marvelous portly nurse with a marvelous
voice, played by the marvelously named Megs Jenkins!
If you think the idea of a murder mystery set in wartime is
an interesting idea, well, ha ha, you’re right, and this movie sure won’t
disappoint! There was maybe a shade too much soap opera for my liking, and I
was unable to perceive Leo Genn as a sex*al object pursued by multitudes, and
the ending has some implausiblities involving a hypodermic, and I thought being
called ‘sister’ meant you were a nun (or Pam Grier), but I guess not; but those
are all small quibbles! It was overall a real cinder-burner!
And again, the best of all is Sim! Take it from me, you’ll
be wishing there was a whole series of Inspector Cockerill films, even if his
name makes him sound like a character in a high school VD film! I give Green For Danger three and a half
resignation letters!
Try another Alistair Sim movie where he plays a detective solving a crime at a country house. An Inspector Calls is the name of it.
ReplyDeleteThanks, ha ha! By garr, I'll check it out!
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