Judgment Deferred is a 1952 British drama film directed by John Baxter and starring Joan Collins, Hugh Sinclair, Helen Shingler and Abraham Sofaer.[2] The film is a remake of the director's earlier film, Doss House (1933).
Judgment Deferred | |
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Directed by | John Baxter |
Screenplay by | Barbara K. Emary Walter Meade Geoffrey Orme |
Produced by | John Baxter Barbara K. Emary |
Starring | Joan Collins Hugh Sinclair Helen Shingler Abraham Sofaer |
Cinematography | Arthur Grant |
Edited by | Vi Burdon |
Music by | Kennedy Russell |
Production company | Group 3 |
Distributed by | Associated British Film Distributors (UK) |
Release date |
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Running time | 88 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Budget | £50,000[1] |
The film was shot at Southall Studios with sets designed by the art director Don Russell. It was the first production from Group 3 Films, a company formed to encourage new young British film-makers (which later produced The Brave Don't Cry, Conflict of Wings, The Angel Who Pawned Her Harp and several other low-budget features).[3][4]
With the assistance of a journalist a group of refugees and down and outs try and unmask the criminal who has framed one of their number as a drug dealer.
The Radio Times described the film as "a muddled, maudlin melodrama that feels like substandard Frank Capra done by amateur theatricals."[4] TV Guide found the film "captivating mainly because of the novelty of the story and the many strange characters that are introduced."[5] Sky Movies wrote "this one occasionally creaks under the strain of its longish running time but offers some striking tableaux, especially within the weird 'court' held by a crowd of criminals, eccentrics and jobless that in some ways recalls the 'jury' that proved the nemesis of Peter Lorre in Fritz Lang's classic thriller 'M'."[3]
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