7.1/10
105
10 user 2 critic

Tomorrow at Ten (1965)

It's a race against time for the police when they have to find a kidnapped boy imprisoned with a time bomb, after his abductor dies without revealing the child's whereabouts.

Director:

Reviews

On Disc

at Amazon

Photos

Add Image Add an image

Do you have any images for this title?

Learn more

People who liked this also liked... 

Action | Thriller
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 6.8/10 X  

Two escapees (Robert Shaw and Malcolm McDowell) are on the run in an unspecified but seemingly Latin-American country. Everywhere they go they are observed and hounded by a menacing black ... See full summary »

Director: Joseph Losey
Stars: Robert Shaw, Malcolm McDowell, Henry Woolf
Action | Comedy | Drama
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 4.9/10 X  

A group of Mexican revolutionaries murders a town priest and a number of his christian followers. Ten years later, a widow arrives in town intent to take revenge from her husband's killers.

Directors: Robert Parrish, Irving Lerner
Stars: Telly Savalas, Robert Shaw, Stella Stevens
The Guest (1963)
Drama
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 7.4/10 X  

Aston (Robert Shaw), a quiet, reserved man, lives alone in a top-floor cluttered room of a small abandoned house in a poor London district. He befriends and takes in Mac Davies (Donald ... See full summary »

Director: Clive Donner
Stars: Alan Bates, Donald Pleasence, Robert Shaw
Drama | Mystery | Crime
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 6.1/10 X  

While investigating a high-profile murder case, a savvy but unorthodox veteran police inspector has to cope with a bad conscience, bad health, an overzealous partner, a timid superior and ... See full summary »

Director: Maximilian Schell
Stars: Jon Voight, Jacqueline Bisset, Martin Ritt
The Cracksman (1963)
Comedy
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 5.8/10 X  

A shorty, kind, very innocent and efficient locksmith is cheated by a burglar in order to rob a car and to open a safe strongbox. The police catches him and is sent to jail. Once there some... See full summary »

Director: Peter Graham Scott
Stars: Charlie Drake, Nyree Dawn Porter, George Sanders
Action | Thriller
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 4.8/10 X  

Soviet KGB General Marenkov defects to the Americans and together with his CIA handler Harry Wargrave they plan an operation meant to reveal the KGB agents in Europe.

Directors: Mark Robson, Monte Hellman
Stars: Lee Marvin, Robert Shaw, Linda Evans
Comedy | Musical | Romance
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 7.1/10 X  

Three young girls working in an agency have build a singing trio. They want to 'lease' the dictaphone of their boss to make a record of their singin, but they are caught and fired. When ... See full summary »

Director: Raoul Walsh
Stars: George Raft, Alice Faye, Frances Langford
Crime | Drama
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 6.9/10 X  

High school students band together to dispense vigilante justice against a vicious gangland boss.

Director: Cecil B. DeMille
Stars: Charles Bickford, Judith Allen, Richard Cromwell
Crime | Drama
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 5/10 X  

Richard Roundtree (SHAFT), Robert Shaw (JAWS) and $100 Million of the Hottest Rocks in the World!

Director: Menahem Golan
Stars: Robert Shaw, Richard Roundtree, Barbara Hershey
Comedy | Drama | Mystery
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 6.5/10 X  

Three play-authors, Horace Dryden, Nick Milburn and "Babe" Lawton, are in an apartment seeking a plot for a new play. They are still on Page 1 when an intoxicated man wanders into their ... See full summary »

Director: Charles Barton
Stars: Lew Ayres, Ruth Coleman, Eugene Pallette
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 6.8/10 X  
Director: Veit Harlan
Stars: Kristina Söderbaum, Philip Dorn, Anna Dammann
Horror | Thriller
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 6.3/10 X  

A mother wishes for the return of her dead son, and that wish is granted by a charm made from a severed monkey's paw.

Director: Norman Lee
Stars: Milton Rosmer, Megs Jenkins, Michael Martin Harvey
Edit

Cast

Credited cast:
John Gregson ...
Inspector Parnell
...
Marlowe
Alec Clunes ...
Anthony Chester
Alan Wheatley ...
Assistant Commissioner Bewley
Kenneth Cope ...
Sergeant Grey
Ernest Clark ...
Dr. Towers
Piers Bishop ...
Jonathan Chester
Helen Cherry ...
Robbie
...
Freddy
Betty McDowall ...
Mrs. Parnell
Harry Fowler ...
Smiley
Renee Houston ...
Mrs. Maddox
Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
Lesley Allen ...
Dancer
Andrew Armour ...
Hospital nurse (as Richard Armour)
Anthony Ashdown ...
Constable Jackson
Edit

Storyline

It's a race against time for the police when they have to find a kidnapped boy imprisoned with a time bomb, after his abductor dies without revealing the child's whereabouts.

Plot Summary | Add Synopsis

Genres:

Thriller

Edit

Details

Country:

Language:

Release Date:

September 1962 (UK)  »

Also Known As:

Chance to Live  »

Company Credits

Production Co:

 »
Show detailed on  »

Technical Specs

Runtime:

Sound Mix:

(Westrex)
See  »
Edit

Did You Know?

Trivia

Third - billed Alec Clunes was the father of actor Martin Clunes. See more »

Soundtracks

Bongo Girl
(uncredited)
Music by Brian Fahey
See more »

Frequently Asked Questions

This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.

User Reviews

the Golliwog Club
26 March 2008 | by (United Kingdom) – See all my reviews

A chap called Marlowe (Robert Shaw, Jaws fans) kidnaps a child of Hampstead parents by posing as the school-run chauffeur. After depositing the child in a deserted mansion, that resembles the one in Fallen Idol, he calmly turns up at the parent's house demanding 50 big ones. He's planning on catching the afternoon TWA to Rio see from where he'll book a long distance call to tell dad where his kid is hid. Now here's the clever bit. If he doesn't get his dough an explosive device hidden in a Golliwog will detonate tomorrow at ten – and he's given the Golliwog to the child for safekeeping.

I bought this DVD from Best of British series issued by Odeon. It's the sort of thing which used to pad out afternoon schedules in the distant days of 3 channel Britain. It's directed by Lance Comfort, who made films for RKO in the 40s and even directed James Mason once upon a time. Comfort, however, never really made a big film and subsequently became lost in the culturally reviled wasteland of second features – many for Butchers Film Service. In recent years there's been an attempt to re-evaluate Comfort's work. There's even been a monograph by Brian McFarlane and one of his films was compared to Resnais on this very website no less (Pit of Darkness).

This one is not quite typical of the second feature era. For a start it's a little bit later (1964) than that. Also there are a few moments that actually remove the film from the largely sealed world of the British B movie. There's even a cute reference to Z cars as Shaw whistles the theme tune while preparing the Golliwog bomb. Incidentally, I feel that an absence of any sort of popular culture from British B's of the 1957-63 era (new towns, West Indians, jeans, the teenage industry, etc) makes them strangely representative of their era. The fashion today for film makers to drench film soundtracks with the pop music of the film's era is not only a lazy way of establishing period flavour but to me rings false. Pop music may be all pervasive now for the ipod generation, if only superficially, but how many middle aged middle class people in the 50s/ 60s had any interest in pop culture beyond a vague awareness of Elvis and the Beatles maybe?

No matter, this film features John Gregson in the lead, as Inspector Parnell investigating the kidnapping, and two stars of the future in the aforementioned Shaw and Kenneth Cope (Cope pops up at the – Er – Golliwog Club – the way the girls are dancing here has to be seen to be believed – and interrogates Renee Houston – who later pops up as his battleaxe mum in Carry On At Your Convenience, trivia fans). Ironically it's Gregson as the established star who is a bit miscast here. He's called to play a maverick cop who goes against his superior, Bewley (Alan Wheatley). Unfortunately, Gregson is far too meek and mild of voice and manner to carry any conviction. The film is very much of its decade though when it pits working class cop Parnell against patrician, hunt ball brown noser Bewley, who simply wants to let Marlowe skip to Brazil with his loot. Unfortunately what could have been a rip roaring barney between the two – one man embodying the 1950s and the other the 1960s – has all potential drama rung out of it by the laborious manner in which Parnell explains that perhaps this wouldn't be such a great idea ("What the hell are you talking about?")

Better is the psychological stand off between Parnell and Marlowe as the Inspector tries to break Marlowe down with a seemingly innocuous line of questioning. We see a little glimpse of what a great character actor Shaw was to become; the authenticity of his behaviour and accent lifting the film momentarily out of the fusty B world into something more contemporary.


11 of 13 people found this review helpful.  Was this review helpful to you?

Message Boards

Recent Posts
Locations carlin4737
Discuss Tomorrow at Ten (1965) on the IMDb message boards »

Contribute to This Page

Create a character page for:
?