SUSPECT is a slight suspense thriller from the Boulting brothers, by all accounts made on a bet in just three weeks after a studio became spare when another film finished early. The story is about the dedicated scientists at a research lab who struggle with a moral dilemma when the government forbids the release of their work for the good of mankind. Some dodgy peripheral characters show up and throw the whole thing up in the air.
It's a cheap studio-bound little picture full of dialogue and much inaction, but it also has enough depth to be worth a watch. Plus, a fine little cast is always worth tuning in for alone. There's Peter Cushing in a rare non-Hammer role from the period; Ian Bannen standing out as a mixed-up guy missing both arms (!); Raymond Huntley as a bigwig; Thorley Walters and Sam Kydd as the comedy relief cops; Kenneth Griffith as a supporting scientist; Spike Milligan supplying surreal laughs; finally, Donald Pleasence as his usual sinister type. If that doesn't whet your appetite, nothing will.
The Risk
1960
Action / Crime / Drama / Thriller
The Risk
1960
Action / Crime / Drama / Thriller
Plot summary
A government team researching cures for plague find their results put on the Official Secrets list. One of their number is so incensed by this that he lets the maimed and jealous companion of a female colleague draw him into what, technically, could be a treasonable act.
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Slight story, great cast
Adequate UK TV-style Low-Budgeter
A decently made,fairly entertaining attempt to make a mini-budget suspense spy thriller with a very familiar British cast;the supporting players are actually more characterful than leads Tony Britton and Virginia Maskell;Ian Bannen was usually cast in intense roles and he does a fine job here as a tortured and tragic soul disabled by circumstance,and there's reliable support from such British stalwarts as Donald Pleasence,Thorley Walters,Raymond Huntley and Kenneth Griffith.The quirkiest performance though comes from legendary comic genius Spike Milligan as an Irish caretaker;his scenes of comic relief work quite well,though there isn't enough of them.
The limitations of production sometimes work against the film,as does a fairly routine and unremarkable plot,but some neat touches by the Boultings,as well as the above performers,make SUSPECT a perfectly watchable effort.
Peter Cushing and Ian Bannen
1960's "The Risk" (British title "Suspect") was a lower budgeted effort from Roy and John Boulting, made in 17 days on a wager since they had three weeks of studio time booked and had finished their most recent production ahead of schedule. Leading its distinguished supporting cast is third billed Peter Cushing as Professor Sewell, heading a close knit group of research scientists whose findings on bacteria and germ warfare are ready to be published, but quickly silenced by their concerned government, afraid that enemies could use their findings against humanity. Sewell and his staff are outraged, but it's the less experienced youngsters who prove to be too impatient, endangering the entire project by allowing themselves to become pawns of a war veteran (Ian Bannen) embittered by the loss of both arms. The little known leads, Tony Britton and Virginia Maskell (a tragic suicide in 1968),are easily overshadowed by their veteran co-stars, especially Thorley Walters as security chief Prince, Sam Kydd his number one aide, and Donald Pleasence as the mysterious Bill Brown, who insists he can find a way to publish the report. On such a short shooting schedule that would do Roger Corman proud, it's the experienced players that keep the plot simmering. Between classic turns in "The Flesh and the Fiends" and "The Brides of Dracula," Peter Cushing enjoys a rare change of pace, a bespectacled, older man of reason in gray hair and mustache, tinkering with props such as a pipe and stop watch. His final speech touching upon responsibility to the law is a moving one: "you are young enough to be sure that you are right, I am old enough to be sure of only one thing, that I can be wrong."