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Trent's Last Case (1952 film)

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Wikipedia article




'Trent's Last Case' is a 1952 British detective film directed by Herbert Wilcox and starring Michael Wilding, Margaret Lockwood, Orson Welles and John McCallum. It was based on the 1913 novel 'Trent's Last Case' by E. C. Bentley, and had been filmed previously in the UK with Clive Brook in 1920, and in a 1929 US version.

It was also the film debut of actor Kenneth Williams, best known for his roles in the 'Carry On' comedy film series.

Plot



A major international financier is found dead at his Hampshire home. 'The Record' newspaper assigns its leading investigative reporter, Phillip Trent, to the case. In spite of the police cordon, he manages to gain entry to the house by posing as a relative. While there he manages to pick up some of the background to the case from Inspector Murch, the Irish detective leading the investigation. Despite Murch's suggestion that the death is suicide, Trent quickly becomes convinced that it was in fact murder.

At the inquest, the coroner swiftly concludes that the deceased, Sigsbee Manderson, had killed himself. Trent, however, is given permission by his editor to continue to pursue the story. His attention is drawn to Manderson's widow, Margaret.

Cast



* Michael Wilding as Phillip Trent

* Margaret Lockwood as Margaret Manderson

* Orson Welles as Sigsbee Manderson

* John McCallum as John Marlowe

* Miles Malleson as Burton Cupples

* Hugh McDermott as Calvin C. Bunner

* Jack McNaughton as Mr Martin, the butler

* Sam Kydd as Inspector Murch

* Henry Edwards as Coroner

* Geoffrey Bayldon as Reporter in court

* Robert Cawdron as PC

* John Chandos as Tim O'Rielly

* Ben Williams as Jimmy, the reporter

* Kenneth Williams as Horace Evans, the junior gardener

Production



Margaret Lockwood had just signed a contract with Herbert Wilcox who was better known for making films with his wife, Anna Neagle. Neagle and Lockwood were among the most popular British stars in the country in the 1940s. Lockwood's career had been in a slump and this film was seen as a comeback. It was her first film in two years. The arrangement with Wilcox would kill off Lockwood's career as a star.

Herbert Wilcox wrote in his memoirs that he paid Orson Welles 12,000 for his role but because Welles was in so much debt the actor wound up with only 150. Wilcox and Welles worked together again on 'Trouble in the Glen' (1954).Herbert Wilcox, 'Twenty Five Thousand Sunsets' p 134-135 Lockwood wrote in her memoirs that she adored working with Wilcox. She said "Orson is a genius and like most geniuses in my experience, sometimes a trifle off. His oddity, or so it seemed to me while making this picture, was that he wanted to play his love scenes with me entirely by himself; without me... I must say they were very successful."

The film's sets were designed by the art director William C. Andrews.

In one scene, Eileen Joyce is shown playing part of Mozart's C minor Concerto, K. 491 at the Royal Opera House with an orchestra under Anthony Collins.

Critical reception



Leonard Maltin rated the film 2.5 out of 4 stars and noted "superior cast in lukewarm tale of the investigation of businessman's death" while Jay Carr on the TCM website, wrote, "In 'Trent's Last Case', Welles shares the spotlight with his spectacular putty nose. It's a mighty ice-breaker of a nose, straight-edged as a steel blade, pulverizing all in its path, including whatever pretension to credibility this creaky British murder mystery might have retained."

References




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