Wednesday, October 28, 2020

FORBIDDEN CARGO (1954)

Decent enough British crime procedural wastes a clever prologue to go conventional on an undercover assignment to nab a gang of fashion conscious drug smugglers.  Too bad, that opening reel is a pip, as if Ealing Studios (home to Alec Guinness and eccentric little British comedies) made a film noir policier with an inspector from the Customs and Excise office rather than Scotland Yard.  Pleasantly wry Nigel Patrick’s the agent sent to look into a complaint about naval amphibious landing vehicles running over a protected beach designated as an endangered bird sanctuary.  Helped by local bird protector Joyce Grenfell, a buck-toothed Ealing regular, Patrick spots the interlopers (and their 80 proof contraband) thru Grenfell’s bird blind observation pit and . . . well, the rest of this putative film could just about write itself: local bird-watching territorialists against those sea-faring gin smugglers.  But after the battle is won, what to do with the alcoholic loot?  Drink, sell or dump?  Mild hilarity ensues.  Alas, my putative suggestion for the plot a road not taken; instead Inspector Patrick follows a lead from this small operation to a much larger one happening in Cannes where he comes across a yacht full of chic drug smugglers, falling for one of them too (Elizabeth Sellars).  Standard doings from then on, though a car chase finale is neatly handled by journeyman megger Harold French and there’s fine nighttime lensing from C.M. Pennington-Richards, known from the Alastair Sim CHRISTMAS CAROL/’51.  There's also an eccentric touch from bad guy Theodore Bikel, strumming out  a tune about the various fates of his criminal forebears.  More oddities like that might have perked things up.  But all we get is a tag ending for bird lady Grenfell, off screen since the prologue, reminding us of the film this might have been.

WATCH THIS, NOT THAT: *Ealing Studios did make a comic smuggling pic.  One of their best, THE LAVENDER HILL MOB/’51 with Guinness & Stanley Holloway.

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