A top class picture for a Butcher's production.
16 December 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Scotland Yard's Inspector Lane (Jack Warner) fights against the clock to find three potential donors for a dying child who urgently requires three pints of an extremely rare blood group. The donors include a boxing champion (Freddie Mills), a black sailor (Earl Cameron) who is reluctant to donate because during the Second World War a Nazi soldier refused his blood and he attributed the incident to racism and, the third, is a murderer on the run whom the police track down in Brighton. But, the man is shot and he is faced with the choice of donating and dying at the scene or, if he refuses, will surely die anyway as he will be tried and hanged for a murder he committed several years before.

An above average offering from poverty row studio Butcher's Films who churned out a countless number of British b-pics throughout the 1950's and early 1960's. Some of which were so awful they showed Britain's film industry at a very low ebb. But, there were one or two exceptions and this stands as one of them. It got elevated to 'A' feature status at the time. Directed by Lewis Gilbert who would go on to become a top director of such films as Reach For The Sky; he succeeds in wringing considerable suspense out of some of the situations - especially the hunt for the murderer on the run - and the stellar cast includes Jack Warner (Dixon Of Dock Green) who is perfectly comfortable in the role of the Scotland Yard inspector and Sid James is in there too perfectly cast as a dodgy boxing promoter and Eric Pholmann as a rival promoter would go on to voice the faceless Ernst Stavro Blofeld in the early Bond films. As was usually the case for these type of films, however, the plot turns are pretty predictable. Nonetheless, it is a top class picture for a Butcher's production and the studio remade the film in 1962 as Emergency with b-movie veteran Francis Searle directing.
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