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Appointment with Crime ()


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An ex-con, released after imprisonment for a jewel theft, swears vengeance on his former accomplices and devises an intricate plan to steal their fortune.

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Cast verified as complete

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Leo Martin
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Detective Inspector Rogers
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Carol Dane
Raymond Lovell ...
Gus Loman
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Gregory Lang
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Noel Penn
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Detective Sgt. Charlie Weeks
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Jonah Crackle
Wally Patch ...
Joe Fisher
Ernest Butcher ...
John Brown
Lew Stone and His Band ...
Dance Hall Orchestra
Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
Francis Adams ...
Prison Priest (uncredited)
André Belhomme ...
Larry (uncredited)
Leon Bijou ...
Jupp (uncredited)
Albert Chevalier ...
Spearman (uncredited)
John Clifford ...
Man in Pepper-throwing Sequence (uncredited)
Percy Coyte ...
Hangman (uncredited)
Paul Croft ...
Dusty (uncredited)
Joe Cunningham ...
Chief Prison Officer (uncredited)
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Mr. Quilp (uncredited)
Buddy Featherstonehaugh ...
Dancer (uncredited)
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Prison Governor (uncredited)
Gaston ...
Dancer (uncredited)
Gwendolyn Gray ...
Carol's Friend (uncredited)
Armand Guinle ...
Van de Beek (uncredited)
Pat Hagan ...
Dancer (uncredited)
Alfred A. Harris ...
Doctor at Hospital (uncredited)
Helen ...
Dancer (uncredited)
Billy Howard ...
Policeman in A.R.P. Shelter (uncredited)
Iris Hunter-Symon ...
Cashier (uncredited)
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Floor Cleaner (uncredited)
James Knight ...
Smokey (uncredited)
Harry Lane ...
Big Mike (uncredited)
Elizabeth London ...
Peggy (uncredited)
Eddie Maguire ...
Passerby (uncredited)
Maurice Maude ...
Sheriff (uncredited)
Ian McLean ...
Detective Mason (uncredited)
Frederick Morant ...
Harry Millerton (uncredited)
Jim Morris ...
Dance Hall Patron (uncredited)
Jimmy Rhodes ...
Rusty (uncredited)
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Prison Governor (uncredited)
John Rorke ...
Casson (uncredited)
George Stenning ...
Jeff (uncredited)
Lew Stone ...
Club Bandleader (uncredited)
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Mick (uncredited)
Anders Timberg ...
Jerry Winters (uncredited)
Robert Brooks Turner ...
Chief Warder (uncredited)
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Mrs. Wilkins (uncredited)
Kenneth Warrington ...
Winckle (uncredited)
Elizabeth Webb ...
Dancer (uncredited)
H Victor Weske ...
Hatchett (uncredited)
Lyn Williams ...
Policeman in Rogers' Office (uncredited)

Directed by

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John Harlow

Written by

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John Harlow ... (screen play)
 
Michael Leighton ... (story)

Produced by

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Louis H. Jackson ... producer

Music by

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George Melachrino

Cinematography by

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James Wilson ... director of photography

Editing by

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Monica Kimick

Editorial Department

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Peter Pitt ... first assistant editor (uncredited)

Art Direction by

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C. Wilfred Arnold

Makeup Department

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Doris Cummings ... hairdresser
Harry Hayward ... makeup artist (as Henry Hayward)

Production Management

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Fred A. Swan ... production manager (as Fred A. Swann)

Second Unit Director or Assistant Director

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Denis Johnson ... assistant director

Sound Department

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Harold V. King ... recording director
Cecil Thornton ... sound recordist (as Cecil V. Thornton)

Camera and Electrical Department

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Gerald Moss ... camera operator (as Gerald D. Moss)

Costume and Wardrobe Department

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Maude Churchill ... wardrobe supervisor

Music Department

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Hans May ... musical director
George Melachrino ... conductor
Crew believed to be complete

Production Companies

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Distributors

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Special Effects

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Other Companies

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Storyline

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Plot Summary

Leo Martin (William Hartnell) is a low-level member of a smash-and-grab gang run by shady dance-club owner Loman (Raymond Lovell), who is cajoled into a risky job on a major jewelry store. When the robbery goes wrong, and Martin is caught (and his wrists broken), the hood keeps silent and does his stretch in prison -- all along, he nurses a grudge against Loman and his driver Hatchett (Victor Weske) for running out on him. And that grudge grows to full-blown, murderous vengeance when Loman blows off the newly-released Martin as no use to the gang (as his hands aren't what they used to be). Now Martin plans to get even by squeezing Loman dry of everything he has, starting with his peace-of-mind -- he implicates the club owner in a murder, while planning a seemingly perfect alibi for himself, and also manages to latch on to the ring-leader that Loman is fronting for, "respectable" art dealer Gregory Lang (Herbert Lom). Lang has a knack for tying up loose ends -- including Loman -- and thinks he can handle a low-level spiv like Martin, but he doesn't reckon with the latter's rage, deviousness, or resourcefulness. Martin's planning gets him past all of the obstacles in his way, even -- so it seems -- the plodding efforts of Inspector Rogers (Robert Beatty), still investigating the killing that put Martin's plan into operation.

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Additional Details

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Also Known As
  • Rendez-vous avec le crime (France)
  • Na Boca do Lobo (Brazil)
  • Gangsterien luolassa (Finland)
  • Cita con el crímen (Mexico)
  • Rendez-vous cu crima (Romania)
  • See more »
Runtime
  • 90 min
Country
Language
Color
Aspect Ratio
Sound Mix
Filming Locations

Did You Know?

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Trivia In 1958, Robert Beatty was a regular on Dial 999 (1958) in which he played Inspector Mike Maguire, a Canadian police officer attached to Scotland Yard, the same as in this film. Beatty in reality is indeed Canadian. See more »
Goofs After the scene where Leo is about to have his wrists crushed by a printing press, the film fades to the next scene where he is in Lang's living room, but inexplicably he is still in possession of the luggage ticket whose whereabouts had been the object of the presumed torture. See more »
Quotes [last lines]
Leo Martin: [screaming in pain with both his wrists caught between a window] My wrists! My wrists! My wrists! My... wrists.
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