Derek Winnert

Information

This article was written on 19 Jun 2017, and is filled under Reviews.

Current post is tagged

, , , , , , ,

Tread Softly Stranger *** (1958, George Baker, Terence Morgan, Diana Dors) – Classic Movie Review 5,635

Fasten your seat belts for Diana Dors as the irresistibly sexy temptress Calico in the 1958 British crime thriller film Tread Softly Stranger. 

‘Some men don’t understand a GOOD-TIME GIRL!’

Director Gordon Parry’s underrated realist 1958 British thriller Tread Softly Stranger stars George Baker and Terence Morgan as English North country industrial town brothers Johnny and Dave Mansell, both in love with the irresistibly sexy temptress Calico (Diana Dors), who decide to rob a steel mill’s payroll.

The screenplay by the film’s producers George Minter and Denis O’Dell is adapted from the stage play Blind Alley by Jack Popplewell, but admirably the film isn’t stagey at all. Parry’s gritty, gloomy crime drama is suitably dourly acted by good people who put their very considerable talents behind it.

The iconic Fifties cast is certainly more than worth a little look, with Dors sensationally irresistible and Baker and Morgan both giving charismatic performances, plus Wilfrid Lawson, Patrick Allen, Jane Griffiths, Joseph Tomelty, and Maureen Delaney all in notable appearances.

Also on the plus side, the engrossing story has its appeal and the ending may come as a surprise and, above all, the movie is extremely nicely photographed in black and white by Douglas Slocombe in film noir style as an early example of the British kitchen sink realist films of the day, using Rotherham, South Yorkshire, England for the extensive location filming. The studio shoot was produced at Walton Studios, Walton-on-Thames, Surrey, England.

The story unfolds in the Yorkshire steel town of Rawborough whence Johnny has returned after mounting large gambling debts in London, moving into a small flat with Dave, a fraudulent steel mill clerk, and Dave’s nightclub hostess girlfriend Calico.

It is the tough and resourceful good-time girl Calico who comes up with the plan for the brothers to rob the payroll at Dave’s workplace to steal enough money to cover Dave’s fraud and Johnny’s debts.

Diana Dors as the irresistibly sexy temptress Calico in Tread Softly Stranger (1958).

Diana Dors as the irresistibly sexy temptress Calico in Tread Softly Stranger (1958).

It was a mild box-office hit, though in 1958 viewed simply as a yet another typical crime potboiler. But Slocombe’s cinematography, with its authentic feel of working life in a Fifties UK steel town, has given it lasting value and appeal, as its first DVD release in the UK in 2008 showed. The slight downside is the lack of Yorkshire accents and the unrealistically portrayed nightclub, both damaging the carefully constructed realism.

Also in a fine cast are Thomas Heathcote, Russell Napier, Norman Macowan, John Salew, Norman Pierce, Michael Golden, Andrew Keir, Jack McNaughton, George Merritt, Hal Osmond, Timothy Bateson, Terry Baker, Patrick Crean, and Sandra Francis.

Tread Softly Stranger is directed by Gordon Parry, runs 91 minutes, is made by George Minter Productions (as Alderdale), is released by Renown Pictures Corporation (UK) and Atlantic Pictures (US), is written by George Minter and Denis O’Dell, based on the stage play Blind Alley by Jack Popplewell, is shot in black and white by Douglas Slocombe, is produced by George Minter and Denis O’Dell, is scored by Tristram Cary and is edited by Anthony Harvey, with art direction by Elven Webb. The theme tune is sung by Jim Dale.

It premiered in the UK on August 15, 1958 and went on general release on August 31, 1958. It was released on September 1, 1959 in the US.

It is screening on Talking Pictures TV in the UK in 2020.

George Baker

RIP George Baker (1931–2011). His films include The Intruder (1953), The Dam Busters (1955), The Ship That Died of Shame (1955), The Woman for Joe (1955), The Feminine Touch (1956), A Hill in Korea (1956), The Extra Day (1956), These Dangerous Years (1957), No Time for Tears (1957) and The Moonraker (1958). But he is probably best known on TV as Tiberius in I, Claudius, and Inspector Wexford in The Ruth Rendell Mysteries.

Denis O’Dell

British film producer Denis O’Dell died on 30 December 2021 at his home in Almería, Spain, aged 98.

He is known for his work on films featuring The Beatles, including A Hard Day’s Night and the telefilm Magical Mystery Tour. He was the director of the Beatles’ Apple Corps and the head of Apple Films. 

The cast

The cast are Diana Dors as Calico, George Baker as Johnny Mansell, Terence Morgan as Dave Mansell, Patrick Allen as Paddy Ryan, Jane Griffiths as Sylvia, Joseph Tomelty as Joe Ryan, Thomas Heathcote as Sgt Lamb, Russell Napier as Potter, Norman MacOwan as Danny, Maureen Delany as Mrs Finnegan, Betty Warren as Flo, Timothy Bateson as Fletcher, John Salew as Pawnbroker, Michael Golden as St John’s Ambulance Man, George Merritt as Timekeeper, Andrew Keir as Inspector Harris, Hal Osmond as Flatcap, Norman Pierce as Publican, Patrick Crean as Blue Blazer, Wilfrid Lawson as Holroyd, Jerold Wells as Constable at racecourse, Jack McNaughton as Workman, Terry Baker as Young Rough, William Kerwin as Michael, Chris Fay as Eric Downs, and Sandra Francis as Linda.

© Derek Winnert 2017 Classic Movie Review 5,635

Check out more reviews on http://derekwinnert.com

Comments are closed.

Recent articles

Recent comments