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Maria Marten, or The Murder in the Red Barn (1935)

5.4 | Aug 18, 1935 (GB) | Crime, Drama, Horror | 01:07

Sensational! Eerie! Sinister! Weird! The most unusual picture of the year!

In 1820s rural England, a young girl is tricked by tales of marriage from a villainous Squire. When she becomes pregnant and disappears, a gipsy lad is blamed.

Featured Crew

Director
Producer
Cinematography
Art Direction
Assistant Director
Sound Recordist
Costume Design
Music, Assistant Director, Music Director

Cast

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Tod Slaughter
Squire William Corder
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Sophie Stewart
Maria Marten
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D.J. Williams
Farmer Thomas Marten
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Eric Portman
Carlos, the gypsy
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Clare Greet
Mrs. Marten
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Gerard Tyrell
Timothy Winterbottom
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Ann Trevor
Nan, the maid
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Stella Rho
Gypsy Crone
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Dennis Hoey
Gambling Winner
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Quinton McPherson
Matthew Sennett (as Quentin McPhearson)

Reviews

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CinemaSerf
5 | Jun 18, 2022
Based on real events, this isn't really one of Tod Slaughter's more memorable efforts. He is the dastardly squire "Corder" who loses the enormous sum of £6,000 in a game of dice, back in England at the start of the 19th century. So as to avoid bankruptcy, he sets his sights on the rather plain daughter of a nearby wealthy family. Meantime, however, he also has designs on a young girl from the village to whom he promises marriage. When she becomes pregnant, local lad "Carlos" (Eric Portman) is blamed - but he isn't just going to sit there and take the blame, especially now the girl has disappeared, presumed dead! The star is certainly very adept at playing the cad, but Portman reminded me too much of a half-hearted Basil Rathbone and the innocent, ill-fated "Maria" (Sophia Stewart) came across more as a silent movie star, with only limited success delivering her dialogue. It does pack quite a bit of story into seventy minutes but it's all just bit too "Jamaica Inn"-lite for me.