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Confession, released in the United States as The Deadliest Sin, is a 1955 British second feature ('B') [2] drama film directed and written by Ken Hughes and starring Sydney Chaplin, Audrey Dalton and John Bentley.
The result is a tricked-up picture unworthy of the suave master of movie thrillers." [13] John McCarten of The New Yorker was also negative, writing: "Presumably, this is meant to be a kind of mystery drama. What it actually amounts to, though, is an exposition of the difficulties a priest can get into by keeping the secrets of the confessional ...
Double Confession is a 1950 British crime film directed by Ken Annakin and starring Derek Farr, Joan Hopkins, William Hartnell and Peter Lorre. [2] The screenplay by William Templeton is based on the 1949 novel All On A Summer's Day by H.L.V. Fletcher (under the pen name John Garden).
OPINION: A new HBO documentary about Jeremy O. Harris' hit Broadway play reminded me that Black art can and should be challenging for smart reasons.
Close friends Judd Steiner [a] and Artie Straus [b] each believe they fit Nietzsche's philosophy of a "superman" (Übermensch) and thus are above the law.From wealthy, socially prominent families, both are graduate law students, under age 20, at the University of Chicago (Artie tells investigators that he began undergraduate studies at the University of Michigan at age 14).
Joe MacBeth is a 1955 British–American crime drama, directed by Ken Hughes [1] and starring Paul Douglas, Ruth Roman and Bonar Colleano. [2] It is a modern retelling of Shakespeare's Macbeth, set in a 1930s American criminal underworld. The film's plot closely follows that of Shakespeare's original play.
Cast a Dark Shadow is a 1955 British suspense film noir directed by Lewis Gilbert and written by John Cresswell, based on the 1952 play Murder Mistaken by Janet Green. [2] It stars Dirk Bogarde, Margaret Lockwood, Kay Walsh, Kathleen Harrison and Robert Flemyng.
The Good Die Young is a 1954 British crime film directed by Lewis Gilbert and starring Laurence Harvey, Gloria Grahame, Joan Collins, Stanley Baker, Richard Basehart and John Ireland. [1]