Film Review
The Snorkel, a slick but
mostly routine crime drama, kicked off Hammer's series of
psycho-thrillers, which gained a sudden impetus following the worldwide
success of Hitchcock's
Psycho (1960). The film
was scripted by Jimmy Sangster (from a story credited to Anthony
Dawson), the first in a run of taut, low budget crime-thrillers which
were guaranteed to include a surprising twist in the final reel.
In contrast to Sangster's subsequent thrillers, which took as their
model the shock thriller
Les Diaboliques (1955),
The Snorkel is a classic suspense
thriller in the Hitchcockian mould, similar to
Suspicion
(1941) and
Shadow of a Doubt (1943).
In what looks like a blueprint for the popular television series
Columbo, the film begins by
presenting what appears to be the perfect murder and is then concerned
with the attempts of the victim's daughter to unravel the mystery, the
intrigue lying not with the identity of the killer but with how his
crime will ultimately be uncovered.
Neat though the resolution is (poetic justice tinged with sadism),
The Snorkel hardly rates as the
most imaginative of Hammer's thrillers, and you can't help feeling that
the ending was slightly botched in an attempt to appease the
censors. It was one of the first films to be directed by Guy
Green, who had previously made a name for himself as a cinematographer,
winning an Oscar for his work on David Lean's
Great Expectations
(1946). Assisted by Jack Asher, one of Hammer's most accomplished
cinematographers, Green brings a polished meticulousness to his
mise-en-scène which imbues the film with as much tension as the
slight plot will allow. Peter van Eyck's chilling portrayal of a
cold-blooded murderer adds greatly to the film's unsettling allure,
with Mandy Miller appearing suitably vulnerable as the first of
Hammer's "girls in peril", an essential ingredient in their
psycho-thriller line. This was Miller's first substantial film
role - she enjoyed a successful career as a child actor, but gave up
acting not long after appearing in the early BBC soap opera
Compact. She is most famous
for her children's record
Nellie the
Elephant, first released in 1956.
The Snorkel looks tame compared
with Hammer's subsequent thrillers, but it provided a sound foundation
on which to build, once Mr Hitchcock had had his fun at the Bates motel.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Writer Paul Decker believes he has committed the perfect murder at his
Italian villa. With the help of a snorkel, he succeeds in
poisoning his wife with gas, hiding beneath the floorboards in the
sitting room he has meticulously sealed as she dies. The verdict
of suicide is accepted by everyone except the dead woman's teenage
daughter Candy. Even when her stepfather provides evidence that
he was across the border in France at the time her mother died Candy is
convinced that Decker murdered her. When the girl comes close to
discovering how he committed the crime, Decker realises he has no other
option than to kill her, in the same way that he disposed of her
mother...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.