High Treason

5.3
19511h 33m

Men from Scotland Yard and military intelligence build a dossier on a sabotage ring.

Cast

Photo of Liam Redmond

Liam Redmond

Cmdr. Robert Brennan

Photo of André Morell

André Morell

Supt. Folland

Photo of Kenneth Griffith

Kenneth Griffith

Jimmy Ellis

Photo of Anthony Bushell

Anthony Bushell

Maj. Elliott

Photo of Mary Morris

Mary Morris

Anna Braun

Photo of Joan Hickson

Joan Hickson

Mrs. Ellis

Photo of Anthony Nicholls

Anthony Nicholls

Grant Mansfield

Photo of Geoffrey Keen

Geoffrey Keen

Morgan Williams

Photo of John Bailey

John Bailey

Stringer

Photo of Patric Doonan

Patric Doonan

George Ellis

Photo of Dora Bryan

Dora Bryan

Mrs. Bowers

Photo of John Harvey

John Harvey

Scotland Yard Man

Photo of Laurence Naismith

Laurence Naismith

Reginald Gordon-Wells

Photo of Jack McNaughton

Jack McNaughton

Benson - Scotland Yard man

Photo of Alfie Bass

Alfie Bass

Albert Brewer (uncredited)

Photo of Harry Fowler

Harry Fowler

Street photographer (uncredited)

Photo of Everley Gregg

Everley Gregg

Mrs Finch-Harvey - Music Club member (uncredited)

Photo of Glyn Houston

Glyn Houston

Railway shunter (uncredited)

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

7/10

Britain has been suffering from a spate of damaging sabotage attacks and it falls to a trio of skilful men - "Brennan" (Liam Redmond), "Folland" (André Morell) and "Elliott" (Anthony Bushell) to combine police, military and intelligence resources and find out just who is behind these highly co-ordinated incidents. Roy Boulting uses these three accomplished actors alongside some other British household names - Joan Hickson, Dora Bryan, Laurence Naismith, a strong contribution from Mary Morris ("Braun") and a peculiar, but effective, role for the normally arch-Brit Geoffrey Keen ("Williams") as well as quite a taut script and pace, to build this well into a tale of treachery and conspiracy that reaches the upper echelons of the political establishment. The ending is good, if a bit rushed, and Redmond and Morell deliver strongly, keeping the intrigue going, managing their frustrations and keeping the story interesting right til the end - with nobody knowing just whom they can trust. Not seen so often nowadays, but if you like the genre then this is certainly at the better end of these post-war fifth columnist dramas.

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