A Victorian-era murder mystery about a parlour maid who discovers that her employer may have killed his first wife.
Stewart Granger
Stephen Lowry
Jean Simmons
Lily Watkins
Bill Travers
David Macdonald
Finlay Currie
Inspector Peters
Ronald Squire
Alfred Travers
Belinda Lee
Elizabeth Travers
William Hartnell
Herbert Moresby
Frederick Leister
Dr. Simpson
Percy Marmont
Magistrate
Marjorie Rhodes
Mrs. Park
Peter Bull
Brasher
Barry Keegan
Constable Burke
Sheila Manahan
Rose Moresby
Norman MacOwan
Grimes (as Norman Macowan)
Cameron Hall
Corcoran
Victor Maddern
Jones
Peter Williams
Constable Farrow
George Bishop
Mark Daly
Arthur Howard
Vicar
W. Thorp Deverreux
Erik Chitty
Hedges
Philip Holles
Director
Arthur Lubin
Adaptation
Arthur Pierson
Screenplay
Lenore J. Coffee
Screenplay
Dorothy Davenport
Short Story
W.W. Jacobs
June 4, 2015
8
The Interruption.
Footsteps in the Fog is directed by Arthur Lubin and collectively written and adapted by Lenore J. Coffee, Dorothy Davenport & Arthur Pierson. It is based on the short story, The Interruption, written by Gothic novelist W. W. Jacobs. It stars Stewart Granger, Jean Simmons, Bill Travers, Belinda Lee and Ronald Squire. Music is by Benjamin Frankel and Technicolor cinematography by Christopher Challis.
Stephen Lowry (Granger) is found by the house maid, Lily Watkins (Simmons), to have poisoned his wife. She promptly uses the information to blackmail Lowry. But with an attraction there they begin to have a relationship, however, motives and means are far from clear...
A darn cracker of an Edwardian thriller that's redolent with Gothic atmosphere and film noir tints, Footsteps in the Fog also features nifty story telling that's acted considerably well by the then husband and wife team of Granger & Simmons. The plot features murder, betrayal and dangerous love, with warped psychology the order of the day, all done up splendidly in Technicolor by Powell & Pressburger's favourite cinematographer, Challis. Characterisations are deliberately perverse, Lily knows Stephen is a murderer, but is not afraid of him, she loves him on the terms of love that only she understands. Stephen is a dastard, dangerously so, but he's not beyond remorse either, and shows it. Both homme and femme are connivers, a recipe for disaster. These facts mark this particular coupling out as one of the most skew whiff in 50s thrillers. And thankfully when the denouement comes, it's a kicker, a real throat grabber that perfectly crowns this deliciously crafty picture. Support comes from a number of established British thespians like William Hartnel, Finlay Currie and Ronald Squire, while the art department have come up trumps for the period design. All told it's a film deserving of a bigger audience and easily recommended to classic melodrama/thriller fans. 8/10
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$0.00
Revenue:
$0.00