The Big Clock

The Strangest and Most Savage Manhunt in History!

7.3
19481h 35m

George Stroud, a crime magazine's crusading editor, has to postpone a vacation with his wife - again - when a glamorous blonde is murdered and he is assigned by his publishing boss to find the killer. As the investigation proceeds to its conclusion, Stroud must try to disrupt his ordinarily brilliant investigative team as they increasingly build evidence that he is the killer.

Production

Logo for Paramount Pictures

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: The Big Clock Trailer 1948

The Big Clock Trailer 1948

Thumbnail for video: Joe Dante on THE BIG CLOCK

Joe Dante on THE BIG CLOCK

Cast

Photo of Ray Milland

Ray Milland

George Stroud

Photo of Charles Laughton

Charles Laughton

Earl Janoth

Photo of Maureen O'Sullivan

Maureen O'Sullivan

Georgette Stroud

Photo of George Macready

George Macready

Steve Hagen

Photo of Rita Johnson

Rita Johnson

Pauline York

Photo of Elsa Lanchester

Elsa Lanchester

Louise Patterson

Photo of Harold Vermilyea

Harold Vermilyea

Don Klausmeyer

Photo of Dan Tobin

Dan Tobin

Roy Cordette

Photo of Harry Morgan

Harry Morgan

Bill Womack

Photo of Richard Webb

Richard Webb

Nat Sperling

Photo of Elaine Riley

Elaine Riley

Lily Gold

Photo of Luis van Rooten

Luis van Rooten

Edwin Orlin

Photo of Margaret Field

Margaret Field

Second Secretary

Photo of Philip Van Zandt

Philip Van Zandt

Sidney Kislav

Photo of Henri Letondal

Henri Letondal

Antique Dealer

Photo of Douglas Spencer

Douglas Spencer

Bert Finch

Photo of Bobby Watson

Bobby Watson

Morton Spalding

Photo of B.G. Norman

B.G. Norman

George Jr.

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Reviews

J

John Chard

9/10

How did I get into this rat race?

Egomaniac publisher Earl Janoth (Charles Laughton) murders his mistress in a fit of temper. He then uses all his power and connections to pin the crime on another man seen close to the crime. George Stroud (Ray Milland), editor of Janoth's own Crimeways magazine, is put in charge of tracing the mystery man. Which is fine until he finds that as he digs deeper, all the evidence points to he himself being the fall guy!

Ostensibly film noir it may be, but The Big Clock still has something to offer even the most casual of cinema goer. Directed by the still criminally undervalued John Farrow, The Big Clock has a touch of the Alfred Hitchcock "wrong man" theme about it. Based on a novel written by Kenneth Fearing, Farrow and his writer, Jonathan Latimer, have managed to craft a piece that is both twisty and unique in its execution. With both things working towards a quite clever and suspenseful ending.

As with the best of film noir, The Big Clock has an intricate plot that's awash with dubious characters and sexual ambiguity. Headed by Laughton's tyrannical philandering Janoth (apparently based on real life publisher Henry Luce), the piece boasts what maybe a gay scar-faced right hand man? (George Macready) and a butch masseur henchman (Harry Morgan playing against type). Only in the wonderful world of film noir can such characters not only exist, but also be so riveting within the film's structure. The piece is also very funny, particularly when Elsa Lanchester's batty artist Louise Patterson is on the screen. I almost fell off my chair laughing during one scene as she hands in a sketch of the wanted man, Picasso would have been proud!

But ultimately it's the story and Ray Milland's ability to see it through that wins the day. Even with the odd little problem, such as the underusing of Maureen O' Sullivan as Stroud's wife, Georgette, thus the domestic strife feels like filler. The Big Clock still finishes as an excellently constructed picture containing interesting thematics on time (this will be down to the individual viewer) that's cunningly set in amongst a media empire environment. Remade with some success in 1987 as a political thriller (No Way Out), The Big Clock still remains the essential film to see. Crime, mystery, drama, comedy and a thriller, it has a little for everyone, even if it is basically a film noir treat. 9/10

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