Lee Patterson stars as an airline pilot wrongly accused of his faithless wife’s murder, in the enjoyable 1959 British second feature crime drama film Deadly Record.

Director Lawrence Huntington’s enjoyable 1959 British second feature crime drama film Deadly Record is written by Vivian A. Cox and Huntington based on the 1958 novel by Nina Warner Hooke, and stars Lee Patterson and Barbara Shelley.
When airline pilot Trevor Hamilton (Lee Patterson)’s faithless wife is found murdered (stabbed in the back) in his flat’s studio, he is wrongly accused of the crime by police Superintendent Ambrose (Geoffrey Keen), and sets out to find who really did it, with the help of his co-worker and wife’s friend Susan Webb (Barbara Shelley).
Among the tasty suspects are the wife’s doctor (Peter Dyneley), his surgery secretary (Jane Hylton), the wife’s theatrical agent (John Paul), exotic dancer Ramon Casadas (Ferdy Mayne), his dance partner (April Olrich), and creepy restaurant owner Angelo (George Pastell).
Canadian actor Lee Patterson is an appealing and convincing virile American lead, keeping enacting his character’s seemingly desperate situation commendable intense and low key. Well coutured Barbara Shelley plays the loyal pal sweetly, graciously, mostly over-dressed for the occasion. Peter Dyneley, John Paul, Ferdy Mayne and George Pastell are all effective, and low key too. By contrast, Jane Hylton (surprisingly) and April Olrich overdo it quite a bit, though maybe not terribly. But Everley Gregg is hugely engaging entertaining as the hero’s gossipy housekeeper Mrs Mac. Geoffrey Keen is relentlessly and unfailingly acid and unpleasant as Superintendent Ambrose, another excellent performance.
The film has to play fast because there is plenty of plot and it is only 58 minutes long. The story is rather good and an entirely solid and involving whodunit. Lawrence Huntington directs with keen enthusiasm, relishing the work in hand.
There is a little precious outside filming, which helps, and a few back projected scenes, which do not help so much. But it all of its time, and really quite a good example of one the short British second feature crime thrillers of the era, very likeable, entirely entertaining.
The film’s crazy credits are written on the pages of a diary, that object having a key role in the plot. It was lost, then found, and then used to try to trap the killer.
The cast are Lee Patterson as Trevor Hamilton, Barbara Shelley as Susan Webb, Jane Hylton as Ann Garfield, Peter Dyneley as Dr Morrow, Geoffrey Keen as Superintendent Ambrose, John Paul as Phil Gamage, Everley Gregg as Mrs Mac, Edward Cast as Constable Ryder, George Pastell as Angelo, Ferdy Mayne as Ramon Casadas, April Olrich as Carmela, Percy Herbert as Belcher.
Running time: 58 minutes.
Release date: June 1959 (UK).
Jane Hylton married Peter Dyneley in 1956.
It was shown in the US in the Kraft Mystery Theatre TV series.
Lee Patterson (March 31, 1929 – February 14, 2007) and Barbara Shelley (13 February 1932 – 3 January 2021) had excellent careers but deserved even better. Shelley started off in the 1953 Hammer film Mantrap, credited under her birth name Barbara Kowin.
© Derek Winnert 2026 – Classic Movie Review 13,930
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