Impact (1963 film)
Impact | |
---|---|
Directed by | Peter Maxwell |
Produced by |
John I. Phillips Ronald Liles |
Written by |
Peter Maxwell Conrad Phillips |
Starring |
Conrad Phillips George Pastell |
Music by | Johnny Gregory |
Cinematography | Gerald Moss |
Edited by | David Hawkins |
Distributed by | Butcher's Film Service |
Release date | 1963 |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Impact is a 1963 British crime thriller directed by Peter Maxwell and starring Conrad Phillips[1] with the pair writing the script. The pair formed a production company Arriba Productions, but Maxwell went to Australia to shoot the Whiplash TV series and never returned to England.[2]
Plot
Seeking vengeance for newspaper articles written about him, crooked Soho nightclub owner 'The Duke' (George Pastell), kidnaps crime reporter Jack Moir (Conrad Phillips), and frames him for theft. While serving a two year prison sentence, Moir plots his revenge, and upon release, embarks on a scheme to clear his name.
Cast
- Conrad Phillips as Jack Moir
- George Pastell as Sebastian 'The Duke' Dukelow
- Ballard Berkeley as Bill MacKenzie
- Linda Marlowe as Diana Travers
- Richard Klee as Wally Wheeler
- Anita West as Melanie Calf
- John Rees as Charlie Wright
- Frank Pettitt as Sid the Foreman
- Edward Ogden as Maury Parfitt
- Jean Trend as Hilda, the Secretary
- Desmond Cullum-Jones as Prison Warder
- Mike Pratt as Detective Sergeant
- Don Barkham as Constable
- Cecil Waters as Jules
Critical reception
The Movie Scene wrote, "Impact" is the sort of old British movie which you stumble across one day on one of those channels which appear well down the list which some people don't even know exist. It is also one of those movies which you start watching and an hour later it is over and you can't remember a great deal of what has happened. The reason why is that it is devoid of excitement and seems to have been made hastily on limited funds forcing the writer to use lost of dialogue to explain things rather than showing it";[3] while the Radio Times wrote "...this programme filler, produced in a matter of days on a shoestring budget, contains no surprises in the plot...Maxwell just about keeps what action there is ticking over, but he is fighting a losing battle with a cast that is substandard, even for a British B-movie";[4] whereas Sky Movies called it a "lively thriller about a reporter who wages a vendetta against a treacherous Soho gangster. George Pastell, as the villain, and Anita West, as a moll, give competent performances."[5]