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Temptation Harbour (1947)

5.1 | Feb 27, 1947 (GB) | Crime, Drama | 01:31

Conscience does make cowards of us all.

The story of a harbor signalman who retrieves a suitcase full of money after witnessing a murder, fails to report it to the police, and finds himself the object of murderous and mercenary interest.

Featured Crew

Director
Writer, Producer
Makeup Artist
Screenplay
Sound Recordist
Production Manager
Assistant Director
Director of Photography
Continuity

Cast

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Robert Newton
Bert Mallinson
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Simone Simon
Camelia
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Marcel Dalio
Insp. Dupré
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Margaret Barton
Betty Mallinson
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Charles Victor
George Gowshall
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Kathleen Harrison
Mabel Slater
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Irene Handl
Ethel Gowshall

Reviews

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CinemaSerf
7 | Dec 04, 2024
When signalman "Bert" (Robert Newton) sees some suspicious activity in the harbour one night he investigates only to find a corpse and a suitcase. On returning to his box to call the authorities, he notices that the case contains rather a large quantity of banknotes. Around £5,000! Now he is single-handedly trying to raise his daughter "Betty" (Margaret Barton) and has a few other issues to contend with, so he decides to keep the windfall and keep his head down. That might have seemed a good plan at the time, but soon people begin to spot the signs of his new found wealth and with police from both sides of the Channel as well as the original owners of the loot on his trail, things start to get distinctly dicey for him. On the plus side, though, he has made a new friend. "Camelia" (Simone Simon) is the only person in whom he's confided, but is she trustworthy? Is anyone? This features a solid cast of regulars like Irene Handl, Edward Rigby and the always reliable Kathleen Harrison as it quite menacingly develops into a story illustrating the dangers of following the green-eyed monster, however well intentioned at the start one may be, and at just how it can change people. Newton is very much in his element - he always did do the frantic and panicky characters well, and he does illicit a degree of sympathy as things close in on him. It packs quite a lot into ninety minutes, pretty much hits the ground running and is well worth a watch.