Cover Girl Killer | |
---|---|
Directed by | Terry Bishop |
Screenplay by | Terry Bishop |
Produced by | Jack Parsons |
Starring | Harry H. Corbett Felicity Young Victor Brooks |
Cinematography | Gerald Gibbs |
Edited by | John Trumper |
Music by | William Davies |
Production company | Parroch Films |
Distributed by | Eros Films |
Release date | 26 September 1959 |
Running time | 61 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Cover Girl Killer is a 1959 black and white British thriller film directed by Terry Bishop and starring Harry H. Corbett, Felicity Young, Victor Brooks and Spencer Teakle.[1]
Plot
In London, a cover girl is found dead, dressed and posed as she appeared on the front cover of Wow magazine. The police uncover the connection, and learn from the magazine's owner, Johnny Mason, an archaeologist who has just inherited the magazine from his uncle, that another recently deceased girl also posed for the magazine. Investigating, the police discover that three cover girls have died, and find that each died of an overdose and dressed in the same outfit in which they appeared in the magazine. All the women have died from overdoses, put down as suicides, but the police discover an injection mark under the latest girl's fingernail. They try to contact the young model from the following edition, but it is too late, the killer has already arranged to meet her to photograph her for an advertising campaign. However, he loses control when she begins to suspect something is wrong, and strangles her.
The viewer is given the insight that this is "Mr Spendoza", a middle-aged man with very thick glasses, a toupee and wearing a raincoat, whose conspicuous appearance makes him memorable, but without the glasses and toupee, makes him hard to identify.
The police try to track down the killer and have several suspects. Posing variously as an advertising executive and a film and TV producer, the crafty murderer eludes capture whilst luring his victims to their deaths one by one. He is motivated by what he sees as the moral corruption of the girls.
Spendoza goes to the police giving his name as Fairchild and gives them a false lead as to what he says connects to one of his tenants, Mr Spurling. He gives a description close to Spendoza emphasising his need for glasses. Fairchild does not wear glasses.
Johnny says the models are refusing to pose for the cover due to the murders. When Inspector Brunner, in charge of the case, says that the killer will not stop murdering, and will be harder to catch if they don't have the magazine connection to help them, June, Johnny's girlfriend, volunteers to model, with the police covertly guarding her, in order to catch the killer. They plan to lure Spendoza to the theatre and burlesque show appearing at the beginning of the film.
Meanwhile, Spendoza (without glasses and under a third name) goes to a theatrical agent and hires someone who looks like his alter ego Spendoza to further throw the police off track by turning up at the theatre for an appointment with June. Believing they've caught the killer, the police take him to the police station, leaving one officer to guard June, but he is attacked by the murderer, and June is alone with the killer.
Cast
- Harry H. Corbett – the man (on-screen credit; Spendoza/Fairchild are not mentioned)
- Felicity Young – June Rawson
- Spencer Teakle – John Mason
- Victor Brooks – Inspector Brunner
- Bernadette Milnes – Gloria Starke
- Christina Gregg – Joy Adams
- Tony Doonan – Sergeant
- John Barrard – Lennie Ross
- Charles Lloyd-Pack – Captain Adams
- Alan Edwards – Hodgkins
- Dermot Kelly – Pop
- Denis Holmes – actor
- Julie Shearing – Rosie
- Tony Thawnton – doctor
- Paddy Joyce – stagehand
- Claude Jones – Constable Jones
- John Baker – plainclothes man
Production
The film was made at Walton Studios in Walton-on-Thames, Surrey, England, and on location in London. A collection of then-and-now location stills and corresponding contemporary photographs is hosted at ReelStreets.[2]
Reception
On the film's release Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "A largely unknown cast acquit themselves well – particularly Harry H. Corbett as the psychopathic killer – in a thriller presented with a certain lightness of touch, at least in the earlier stages, which makes it a less sordid piece than the plot might suggest".[3] Kine Weekly said: "The plot's a bit theatrical and both the acting and direction are uneven, but the macabre is, nevertheless, logically punctuated with striptease, and the finale grips".[4]
Leslie Halliwell (1989) reviewed the film as "Good unpretentious second feature with plenty of suspense".[5]
In The British 'B' Film (2009), Chibnall and McFarlane write that the film "looks pretty ridiculous beside such contemporary treatments of the theme as Psycho and Peeping Tom (both 1960), but in its breathless naiveté it is highly evocative of a key moment of transition in British attitudes towards sexual display".[6]
In popular culture
Frankie Goes to Hollywood paraphrased dialogue from the film in their No.1 single "Two Tribes" (1984) – "Are we living in a land where sex and horror are the new gods?".[7][8] The original dialogue in the film is "Surely sex and horror are the new gods in this polluted world of so-called entertainment?" (spoken by Mr Fairchild at 48:28).
DVD release
Cover Girl Killer was released on Region 2 DVD on 11 October 2010.
References
- ↑ "Cover Girl Killer". British Film Institute Collections Search. Retrieved 8 November 2023.
- ↑ "Cover-Girl Killer". ReelStreets. Retrieved 15 March 2022.
- ↑ "Cover Girl Killer". Monthly Film Bulletin. 27 (312): 36. 1960 – via ProQuest.
- ↑ "Cover Girl Killer". Kine Weekly. 513 (2731): 30. 1960 – via ProQuest.
- ↑ Halliwell, Leslie (1989). Halliwell's Film Guide (7th ed.). London: Paladin. p. 226. ISBN 0-586-08894-6.
- ↑ Chibnall, Steve; McFarlane, Brian (2009). The British 'B' Film. London: BFI/Bloomsbury. p. 156. ISBN 978-1-8445-7319-6.
- ↑ Bell, Max (4 August 1984). "Chain reaction". No. 1 Magazine: 30.
- ↑ "Two Tribes, by Frankie Goes To Hollywood". Songfacts. Retrieved 20 September 2023.