Wall of Death (1951) Poster

(1951)

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7/10
Typical Fifties moral tale
craig_chappell7 March 2005
There seem to be a large number of these types of film produced in the fifties and sixties in the UK. They always seemed to have a very obvious villain and very obvious good guys, usually the only difference between the films would be the background setting. This is a good example of this type of movie because it's set in a rather run-down fairground populated by stereo-typical fairground types - the heart-of-gold fortune-teller, the gruff but kind boxing promoter, the naive up-and-coming boxer and the shady character riding the Wall of Death. Maxwell Reed plays 'Racer' the archetypal kid from the wrong side of the tracks with an unknown past and a huge chip on his shoulder. Laurence Harvey plays the gullible but likable 'Mag' Maguire who idolises 'Racer' despite the latter wearing the heaviest eye shadow seen on film.

I've always had a soft spot for these types of low-budget films because they seem to capture a snapshot of a post-war Britain that is long gone. The plot is predictable but enjoyable nonetheless.
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6/10
Young Harvey is no match for Villainous Reed
malcolmgsw14 June 2013
Warning: Spoilers
Harvey is a fairground booth boxer and Reed plays a villainous motor cycle racer who has already been thrown off the track.Reed needs money for a bike so that he can race again and will stop at nothing.He enlists Harvey into helping him steal the money.Meanwhile Harvey is making strides in his career and knocks out heavyweight contender Frank(Nosher)Powell and he is favourite to win the hand of Susan Shaw.However Reed nearly kills in his attempt to get the cash and Shaw deserts Harvey.All is set up for a finale on the race track and guess what happens?It is all very predictable but entertaining nevertheless.With stylish direction from Lewis Gilbert.
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7/10
Walk on the Wild Side
richardchatten8 November 2019
All three of the young leads in this movie died young within five years of each other during the 1970s. A bleak trawl of the lower depths recalling 'Nightmare Alley', it teams two of postwar British cinema's most saturnine bad boys and biggest quiffs, of whom only Maxwell Reed is deemed incapable of redemption (although Laurence Harvey's hero-worshipping of him does seem to go beyond mere admiration).

Wilkie Cooper's superb photography goes some way towards making the basic squalor of the subject palatable, while the supposedly poky little room unemployed 'showgirl' Susan Shaw rents looks luxuriously spacious by 21st Century standards.
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4/10
Pretty dull, it has to be said
Leofwine_draca2 May 2015
I think the early 1950s was an interesting time for British cinema. Hitchcock was making forgotten but intriguing efforts like STAGE FRIGHT while once in a while equally forgotten gems like DOUBLE CONFESSION seem to come along out of nowhere. Sadly THERE IS ANOTHER SUN, a morality tale centred around a big top circus, has little redeeming value for the modern viewer.

The best thing about it is that it paints a picture of the era, while the morals of the picture are fun to watch. The cast, including Laurence Harvey and Leslie Dwyer, give performances that can only be described as professional. A shame, then, that the story of a love triangle between a woman and two men and the subsequent small-scale crime just don't go anywhere. There's a plodding detective sub-plot and lots of worthiness, but the film just didn't hold my attention. That THERE IS ANOTHER SUN is so dull comes as a surprise when you consider director Lewis Gilbert went on to direct Bond classics like THE SPY WHO LOVED ME.
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4/10
I didn't make it to death. I made it to sleepy time.
mark.waltz29 April 2022
Warning: Spoilers
With a youthful British cast, it is surprising how boring this film is even though it has elements of film noir and the later genre of troubled young adults. If they tried to create interesting characters for the men played by Maxwell Reed and Laurence Harvey, they failed even though one is a racing driver and the other is a Prizefighter, both vying for the affections of Susan Shaw and the elements of crime surrounding their professions. The only element that was interesting for me was the presence of Hermione Baddeley as a fortune teller who makes things up as she goes along, some of them pretty funny. You'd think that a film involving two sporting events would be more exciting, but the script is extremely chatty and after a while, that becomes a bit cumbersome. It's still well filmed like most British working-class films, with a greediness that wasn't prevalent in many American films at the time. It's just too bad that there wasn't a more interesting story that kept my interest consistently.
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8/10
Laurence Harvey vs Nosher Powell!
Weirdling_Wolf22 April 2022
This engrossing 50s melodrama from British film icon Lewis Gilbert is colourfully set against the playfully boisterous backdrop of an especially raucous, rough n' tumble fun fair, populated with an engaging host of entertaining protagonists. Effectively playing out like a pulpy crime-noir, Gilbert's gutsy drama 'There is another Son' is happily replete with a lively text by writer Guy Morgan and the crisp B/W photography by Wilkie Cooper and Dudley Lovell is wonderfully cinematic, with resplendent set design by George Provis. Fundamentally a doomed ménage à trois with strikingly tall, darkly brooding 'Wall-of-Death' motorcyclist 'Eddie Racer'(Maxwell Reed) affable, warm-hearted, iron-fisted, up-and-coming boxer Mag Maguire (Laurence Harvey), and the lissome, luminous blonde dancer Lillian (Susan Shaw) glistens enticingly as the sublime object of their affections.

With plentiful pulse-pounding incident, amusing banter, break-neck, daredevil motorcycling, bravura fisticuffs, and swelteringly amorous clinches there's nary a dull moment! The self-absorbed machinations of Racer's increasingly criminal attempts to successfully finance his return to his former glory as top speedway racer inexorably draw sweet-natured Lillian and her gullible, deliciously handsome beau Mag Maguire into morally murky waters! Briskly directed by Lewis Gilbert, immaculately performed by a brilliant cast, with a rousingly lush score by Wilfred Burns, the heady, helter-skelter carny atmosphere of 'There is another Sun' is excitingly realized, the characters are sympathetic, and the frantic climax is suitably thrilling. While not oft remembered, this dynamic drama has one of Laurence Harvey's most effortlessly likeable performances, and his bruising bout with sturdy, real-life pugilist Nosher Powell has lost little of its impact!
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8/10
Better than I remembered
lucyrfisher18 December 2018
No film with Maxwell Reed can be all bad. The director even used his height as a plot point - how can he hide in a crowd? Racer (Wall of Death) and Maguire (boxer) pick up Lilian (Susan Shaw) in a dodgy nightclub where they gamble away their savings. Racer wants to get back on the Speedway track, while Maguire wants to make it as a boxer. Meanwhile he falls in love with Lilian, but fears she has a thing for racer. The gruff trainer meanwhile is in love with the fortune teller - played to great effect by the wonderful Hermione Baddeley. "Your kabbalistic number is 69 and your lucky colour is blue - you're a Scorpio, I can tell!" The real star is the seedy background of the fair, the vans, and the grubby boarding house where Lilian is staying with a girlfriend - their show has closed and they're on their uppers. They still existed, with their Victorian furniture, in the 60s and 70s.
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