The House of the Arrow (1953 film)
- August 1953 (1953-08)
The House of the Arrow is a 1953 British mystery film directed by Michael Anderson and starring Oskar Homolka, Robert Urquhart and Yvonne Furneaux. It is the fourth film version of the 1924 novel The House of the Arrow by A. E. W. Mason, featuring his French detective Inspector Hanaud.[1]
Cast
- Oskar Homolka - Inspector Hanaud
- Robert Urquhart - Jim Frobisher
- Yvonne Furneaux - Betty Harlowe
- Josephine Griffin - Ann Upcott
- Harold Kasket - Boris Wabersky
- Pierre Lefevre - Detective Maurice Thevenet
- Pierre Chaminade - Detective Moreau
- Jacques Cey - Police Commissaire Giradot
- Keith Pyott - Gaston, the butler
- Andrea Lea - Francine, the maid
- Rene Leplay - Hanaud's Clerk
- Anthony Nicholls - Lawyer Jarrett
- Ruth Lodge - Nurse Jeanne Baudin
Critical reception
Allmovie wrote, "one advantage the 1953 version of House of the Arrow has over the first versions is the bluff, hearty presence of Oscar Homolka, who could entertain an audiences by reading the want ads if he so desired";[2] and Britmovie noted, "director Michael Anderson handles the thrills pleasantly and the noir suspense is balanced out by Hanaud’s conceited humour with fine results. Austrian actor Oscar Homolka produces a fine portrayal of Mason’s super-smug detective of the French Surete, and the rest of the Anglo-French cast provide sterling support in this well turned-out thriller."[3]
References
External links
- The House of the Arrow at IMDb
- The House of the Arrow at AllMovie
- v
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- At the Villa Rose (1910)
- The Affair at the Semiramis Hotel (novella, 1917)
- The House of the Arrow (1924)
- The Prisoner in the Opal (1928)
- They Wouldn't Be Chessmen (1934)
- "The Ginger King" (short story, 1940)
- The House in Lordship Lane (1946)
- Inspector Hanaud's Investigations (omnibus, 1931)
adaptations
At the Villa Rose |
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The House of the Arrow |
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