Gideon's Day (film)
Gideon's Day | |
---|---|
US film poster with the US title | |
Directed by | John Ford |
Produced by | Michael Killanin |
Screenplay by | T. E. B. Clarke |
Based on |
Gideon's Day by John Creasey |
Starring |
Jack Hawkins Dianne Foster Cyril Cusack Andrew Ray |
Music by | Douglas Gamley |
Cinematography | Freddie Young |
Edited by | Raymond Poulton |
Distributed by | Columbia Productions |
Release date | 25 March 1958 |
Running time | 91 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Gideon's Day (originally released in the United States as Gideon of Scotland Yard) is a 1958 police procedural crime film starring Jack Hawkins, Dianne Foster and Cyril Cusack. The film, which was directed by John Ford, was adapted from John Creasey's novel of the same name. It was released in the United States as Gideon of Scotland Yard. [1]
Although this is the first film to feature the named character of George Gideon, Jack Hawkins had already played a very similar role in the British film The Long Arm two years earlier.
Plot
The film follows a day in the life of Detective Chief Inspector George Gideon of the Metropolitan Police. His day starts when he received information that one of his officers has been taking bribes. Despite his hectic schedule, his wife reminds him his daughter has a violin recital that evening; she also tells him her aunt and uncle are coming for tea before the concert. This becomes a recurring theme throughout the film, as Gideon is continually hampered in his efforts to finish work and return home.
On the way to Scotland Yard he drops his daughter off at the Royal College of Music, but is stopped by a young constable for running a red light. Once at his office, he calls in the detective whom a "snout" [i.e. informant] has told him is taking bribes and suspends him. Gideon then gets word that an escaped mental patient from Manchester is on his way to London. Meanwhile, an audacious gang is robbing payrolls.
The mental patient is soon arrested, but not before he has killed the daughter of his former landlady. Gideon wants to congratulate personally the policeman who made the arrest, only to discover it's the same overzealous young officer who gave him a summons for his early morning traffic offence. Various jobs then preoccupy the chief inspector while his detectives continue to investigate the bribery case. News then arrives that the suspended policeman has been run down by a car - a vehicle that fits the description of one used in the earlier payroll jobs. After Gideon visits the dead officer's wife, evidence soon emerges that links the dead detective to a woman who went to clubs he frequented.
Gideon goes to the address and discovers that the woman's husband was responsible for the robberies because he wanted the financial means to be a painter. The husband then tricks his wife into holding a gun on Gideon while he makes his escape. The detective uses his calm manner to defuse the situation. But before he can return home, the phone rings again. A safety deposit firm has been robbed by a gang of rich socialites who have been cornered inside. When the police finally draw them out, Gideon catches one of the gang himself. But he loses his temper when he finds out that the elderly night watchman was killed in cold blood by the man he arrested, telling him "you'll hang for this, you rich nobody!"
Finally Gideon gets home. His wife tells him that their daughter has met a nice young man at her recital. It turns out it's the young constable again. He had been holding the chief inspector's concert ticket all day following their first encounter that morning. This led him to meet Gideon's daughter who is quite taken by the young man. But finally, just as they are all sitting down to supper, the phone rings one last time. A man believed to be Paul the Painter has been arrested at London Airport. The film concludes with a final irony. The young constable, who is driving Gideon to the airport, is stopped by another policeman as he races through the capital's foggy streets for running a red light!
Cast
- Jack Hawkins - DCI George Gideon
- Dianne Foster - Joanna Delafield
- Cyril Cusack - Birdy Sparrow
- Andrew Ray - PC Simon Farnaby-Green
- Anna Massey - Sally Gideon
- James Hayter - Robert Mason
- Ronald Howard - Paul Delafield
- Howard Marion-Crawford - Chief Constable
- Laurence Naismith - Arthur Sayer
- Derek Bond - Detective Sergeant Kirby
- Anna Lee - Kate Gideon
- John Loder - Ponsford
- Miles Malleson - Judge
- John Le Mesurier - Prosecuting Counsel (uncredited)
- Robert Raglan - Dawson (uncredited)
- Michael Trubshawe - Sergeant Golightly
- Jack Watling - Reverend Small
- Francis Crowdy - Francis Fitzhubert
- Grizelda Harvey - Mrs. Kirby
Production
The film, which was shot on location in and around London, was Anna Massey's cinematic debut (she was aged 19 at the time). Interiors were completed at the MGM British Studios, Borehamwood in Hertfordshire, England.
References
- ↑ "Gideon's Day". British Film Institute. Retrieved 14 May 2014.
External links
- Gideon's Day on IMDb