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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Plot  





2 Cast  





3 Production  





4 Critical reception  





5 References  





6 External links  














The Strange Affair






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The Strange Affair
Australian daybill poster
Directed byDavid Greene
Written byEve Greene
Stanley Mann
Jerome Odlum
Oscar Saul
Bernard Toms (novel)
Produced byHoward Harrison
Stanley Mann
StarringMichael York
Jeremy Kemp
Susan George
CinematographyFranz F. Palmer
Alex Thomson
Edited byBrian Smedley-Aston
Music byBasil Kirchin
Jack Nathan (uncredited)

Production
company

Paramount British Pictures

Distributed byParamount British Pictures

Release date

  • 24 July 1968 (1968-07-24)

Running time

106 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

The Strange Affair is a 1968 British crime drama film directed by David Greene and starring Michael York, Jeremy Kemp and Susan George.[1] It is based on the 1966 novel by former Metropolitan policeman and private investigator Bernard Toms that was believed to be based on policeman Harold Challenor[2]

Plot

[edit]

Peter Strange is an idealistic young police recruit who gets mixed up with the machinations of the tough and jaded Scotland Yard Detective Sergeant Pierce. Pierce is trying to arrest a gang for drug smuggling and later murder, but is thwarted respectively by a corrupt colleague and an unconvincing witness. Strange is shocked by finding the dead body of a murdered informant he knew and is himself brutally assaulted. Meanwhile, Strange is having an affair with Frederika, a minor who he does not know is part of a pornography ring; her supposed aunt and uncle film and photograph her sexual encounters from behind a one-way mirror.[3] (Susan George was 17 at the time the film was shot.)

Pierce obtains copies of photographs of Strange's sexual encounter with Frederika and threatens to expose him to his superiors, ending his career, unless Strange plants some heroin on one of the gang. Strange reluctantly agrees, despite planning to leave the force anyway, as he is disillusioned by the failure to catch and convict the drug gang. Strange's planting of evidence is revealed and he is convicted of perverting the course of justice and driven away to be jailed.

Cast

[edit]

Production

[edit]

It was shot at Twickenham Studios and on location around London.[citation needed] The film's sets were designed by the art director Brian Eatwell.

Critical reception

[edit]

The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "Greene gets strong performances from his cast (particularly from Jeremy Kemp as the psychotic Pierce); and if he is ill served by a script which too often falls back on coincidence to tie up its loose ends, it is all the more to his credit that, for the duration of the film at least, this weakness is barely noticeable."[4]

Allmovie wrote: "a fragmentary "'60s" interpretation of a straightforward Bernard Toms novel ... Like many British films of its period, it seems more concerned with inducing pop-art headaches than simply telling its story.[5]

Time Out wrote: "a well-written anecdote about police manners and methods, straight out of some TV cop series, but as viewed by Greene's wilfully wayward camera, it becomes a bizarre, quirkishly funny thriller which laces its documentary surface with a fine grain of fantasy. Much of Greene's later work disappointed, but here he displays a visual flair (gang violence in an echoing warehouse, murder among the wrecked cars in a scrapheap, seduction in a fantastically opulent boudoir) that would not entirely have shamed Welles in his Lady from Shanghai [1947] mood.[6]

The New York Times wrote: "If the muscular and sexy goings-on are excessive and irrational on occasion, some of the principals lend credible, physical support to their characterizations. Michael York ... is properly personable and confused as the harried Strange. Susan George, a comparative newcomer who is pert, snub-nosed and pretty, makes eroticism a pleasure, even if her sudden switch from promiscuity to Strange's everloving girl, remains a mystery. Jeremy Kemp is convincingly neurotic as the indomitable sergeant ... They all prove that The Strange Affair is where the sensational action is, even if it is entirely strange and unbelievable.[7]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "The Strange Affair". British Film Institute Collections Search. Retrieved 10 December 2023.
  • ^ Morton, James (17 September 2008). "Harold Challenor". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 18 October 2023.
  • ^ "The Strange Affair Trailer, Reviews and Schedule for The Strange Affair | TVGuide.com". Movies.tvguide.com. Retrieved 10 March 2014.
  • ^ "The Strange Affair". The Monthly Film Bulletin. 35 (408): 151. 1 January 1968 – via ProQuest.
  • ^ "The Strange Affair (1968) - Trailers, Reviews, Synopsis, Showtimes and Cast". AllMovie. Retrieved 10 March 2014.
  • ^ "The Strange Affair | review, synopsis, book tickets, showtimes, movie release date | Time Out London". Timeout.com. 8 October 2007. Retrieved 10 March 2014.
  • ^ A. H. Weiler. (25 July 1968). "Movie Review - The Strange Affair - Strange Affair'". The New York Times. Retrieved 10 March 2014.
  • [edit]
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_Strange_Affair&oldid=1190266035"

    Categories: 
    1968 films
    1968 crime films
    British crime films
    1960s English-language films
    Films directed by David Greene
    Films scored by Basil Kirchin
    Films based on British novels
    Police detective films
    Paramount Pictures films
    Films set in London
    Films shot in London
    Films shot at Twickenham Film Studios
    Films with screenplays by Stanley Mann
    Films produced by Stanley Mann
    1960s British films
    Hidden categories: 
    Articles with short description
    Short description is different from Wikidata
    Use dmy dates from June 2021
    Use British English from September 2012
    Template film date with 1 release date
    All articles with unsourced statements
    Articles with unsourced statements from December 2023
     



    This page was last edited on 16 December 2023, at 22:36 (UTC).

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