Runtime: 91 minutes
Directed by: Sidney Gilliat
Starring: Trevor Howard, Sally Gray, Alastair Sim, Leo Genn, Henry Edwards
From: Individual Pictures
For those that love their sassy, carefree detectives… in the continuing quest to have variety in July, I chose a British mystery thriller picture which had been on my Criterion Channel watchlist for awhile now.
The setting is a rural UK hospital in 1944-the year allows for the Germans to frequently bomb the area via air raids. World War II and the German air raids are key plot points, for reasons that won’t be elaborated on. Time is spent getting to knew the paired-down set of doctors and nurses-their catty arguments and disagreements-before a postal worker dies during an operation.
Green for Danger (the title refers to a key moment in the film) features actors I wasn’t too familiar w/, but one was Trevor Howard—the other Alastair Sim of 1951 Scrooge fame. If you only know him from that, Sim’s character will be eye-opening. He was an unseen narrator at first before appearing as a Scotland Yard detective. His Cockrill was in fact sassy and carefree as other detectives before and since. The humor thankfully wasn’t constant and he used detective skills while talking to the suspects; after a major event, he enacts a bold plan to reveal the killer.
Green was filmed well by Sidney Gilliat (also a writer who worked for the likes of Carol Reed & Hitchcock), featuring quality cinematography and sets; most of the film is set in the hospital. Of course, most delicious was viewing all the characters & how they interacted with each other. This typically included the expected dry acerbic British wit. The mystery itself always kept me at rapt attention.
For those that lap up such entertainment, Green for Danger is undoubtedly worth a shot.