The Man in the Road (1956) Poster

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6/10
Minor British spy thriller with some noir twists
henri sauvage8 September 2010
After an introductory scene in which a car is waylaid on a narrow English country lane, a corpse substituted for the driver and the car doused with gasoline and set on fire, a man (Derek Farr) wakes up in a private hospital.

His amiable but vaguely sinister attending physician, Prof. Cattrell (Donald Wolfit) tells the man that he was the victim of a hit-and-run accident, and his name -- according to the wallet found in his suit -- is Ivan Mason.

There's just one problem: Mason can't remember his past. Or rather, what he does remember doesn't jibe with who they tell him he is, and every time he has one of these "false" memories he gets a blinding headache. Mason slowly begins to suspect there's something not quite right going on, even as Cattrell confronts him with all sorts of evidence that he really is Mason.

Both the amnesia and the headaches are the results of Cattrell's hypnosis, as part of a devious Commie plot to get Mason -- in actuality a top nuclear physicist -- to voluntarily go to Russia. Where, of course, his amnesia will be "cured" and all his nuclear secrets extracted.

Although when you think about it, the plan seems both cumbersome and far-fetched, the players make it look fairly convincing. One of the great things about these British B films is the level of acting talent they could draw on for supporting characters, actors like Wolfit and Cyril Cusack and Karel Stepanek. Sure, the leading man is rather wooden, but strikingly beautiful Ella Raines (in what was, sadly, her last big-screen appearance) more than compensates for Farr's deficiencies.

Stanley Pavey's black-and-white cinematography is crisply competent, with plenty of shadows and low angle shots to instill an appropriately paranoid atmosphere.

This is a distinctly minor thriller, compared to the likes of "The Spy Who Came in from the Cold", but still, it has its moments, and (mostly) manages to hold the viewer's interest until the end.
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6/10
What's my line?
ctomvelu18 September 2010
An all-star cast (in Britain, at least) does its darndest to keep this talky adaptation of a popular novel afloat. A man awakes to find he cannot remember who he is. He is apparently a patient in a rural nursing home,to boot. Turns out he's a noted scientist the commies have kidnapped and hypnotized, with plans to take him with them to the Soviet Union, where they will pick his science-filled noggin. He befriends a fellow in the home who tells him of the bad guys' nefarious plan, and a little later makes the acquaintance of a pretty American writer who lives in a cottage down the road. Together, they work to unravel the mystery of his identity. Sir Donald Wolfit plays the main villain and Ella Raines is the pretty and resourceful neighbor. These names will mean nothing to most of you, but they were pretty big in their time. In fact, this was Raines' last motion picture. Wolfit, also a noted stage actor, kept working in films for another 10 years, and may be remembered best (probably much to his chagrin) for a nifty little programmer called "Blood of the Vampire," which was made about the same time as this. This modestly budgeted British flick is typically heavy on talk, but there's just enough action and a tiny bit of suspense in the second half to maintain the viewer's attention.
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6/10
Commies again
blanche-29 April 2016
"The Man in the Road" is a British film from 1956 based on the novel of the same name. It concerns a famous scientist who is kidnapped while driving and taken to a country nursing home. When he awakens, he can't remember who he is.

The Communists have taken him and are sending him to Russia. They tell him his name is Ivan Mason, but he just can't make the connection. They keep him hypnotized.

A drunk in the home, either a patient or a doctor, clues him in on what's going on. While walking, he's asked for a ride by a neighbor (Ella Raines) and ends up telling her his story. Needless to say, she's a little nervous around him. There is something about him that's believable, so she investigates.

Derek Farr plays the confused scientist, and the great stage actor Sir Donald Wolfit is the villain. This was Ella Raines' last film. A beautiful woman and always a nice presence in any film. With her hair a little longer, she always reminded me of Gene Tierney. She retired after this. Sadly, like Tierney, she died from a smoking-related disease - in her case, esophageal cancer, in Tierney's, emphysema.

The movie is a little too talky for a suspense film and comes off as being on the slow side. It is recommended though -- these actors all enjoyed prolific careers, so the acting is good, and it's entertaining enough. Communism was a major subject in the late '40s and '50s, and this movie fits right into the genre.
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7/10
Ella Raines my favourite American heroine
howardmorley27 August 2016
I really enjoyed seeing Ella Raines;(the web 1947, the suspect & la dama desconicida a.k.a phantom lady 1944, The senator was indiscreet 1947 and of course impact 1949) in this British produced film from 1956; in fact she was my favourite American heroine actress.She died aged 68 of a lung type of cancer.This was my first viewing of this film courtesy of Youtube.com.Her personality seemed to be naturally heroic and hence she sparkled in this genre film.Russell Napier appeared in numerous British 'b' films in the 50s & early 60s playing Scotland Yard police inspectors and here makes another appearance as such.The lead actor, Derek Farr I know from "The Dambusters" (1954) Quiet Wedding (1940) & Quiet Weekend (1946).Karel Stepanek played his usual nasty character which was usually a Nazi as in "Sink the Bismark" (1960) or as here a Communist agent.Remember this was filmed before perestroika at the height of the cold war.

Another reviewer made a comparison of the lovely Ella Raines with the equally lovely Gene Tierney with which I concur.I certainly did not find the plot too talky and it had a nice balance between dialogue and action and I awarded it 7/10.
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6/10
A very good idea, but it was done better a decade later...
planktonrules8 September 2010
Warning: Spoilers
The plot idea is very good for "Man in the Road" but the concept was done much better a decade later in the form of "36 Hours"--and I strongly recommend you see this James Garner movie first. However, if you can allow for some plot problems here and there, "Man in the Road" is still well worth seeing.

This British film begins with some poor chap being pummeled in the middle of the road later one night. In the next scene, the same man awakens in a sanitarium and has been told he'd been in a terrible accident and has lost memory. He spends a while in the film being an ordinary patient--unaware that he was NOT in an accident and the reason he cannot remember who he is is because evil Communist agents have used hypnosis on him to convince him to forget his past. Only later does he slowly come to realize that it's all a ruse--but will people on the outside believe him when he tells them of his plight--especially because the sanitarium is actually a mental hospital!

While not a bad concept in general, there were a few problems with the script--though the no-name actors did pretty well. First, although the average person might believe the hypnosis angle, I am clinically trained in its use and know you cannot make people forget the past like this or do what they don't want to do down deep. Second, the film is actually rather low energy--though fortunately it DOES heat up towards the end. Third, there is no logical reason for the nice lady to believe the brainwashed scientist's story--she just buys it all without much question! Still, with these problems it's not a bad flick--and an interesting Cold War relic.
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5/10
Road Kill
kapelusznik1811 April 2016
Warning: Spoilers
***SPOILERS*** Mildly interesting British spy movie about a man found fully clothes, that look like he got them just out the dry cleaners,who appears to be lost to the world. The man later identified as Ivan Mason,Derek "Far from home" Farr, is later found out to be top British scientist Dr James Paxton, who discovered a new formula for "Chicken Kiev" that's just out of this world and if put on the market can bankrupt the Soviet Union's economy!

Of course Paxton has no idea about the secret formulas as well as who he is since before he escaped his Soviet captors he was hypnotized by Sovite agent who kidnapped him. With both his his brain and memory erased the nursing home owner Dr.Cartell played by Leonid Brezhnev, the future dictator of the USSR, look alike Don Wolfit,who has the confused Paxton convinced that he mother back in Moscow is on her death bed and want's to see him for the very last time before she finally kicks off!

****SPOILERS****Paxton at first goes along with all this until he meets Rhonda Ellis, Elia Raines, who fills him in on the real dope,or information,of what's going on and puts her life, as well as that of Paxton, in mortal danger. With at first Cartell trying to have Paxton kidnapped and flown out of Britain his plan backfires with Scotland Yard coming on the scene and preventing that from happening. As for Cartell in his attempt to escape-by helicopter-he drops some 100 feet to his death since in his haste he forget to put on a parachute.
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8/10
Ella Raines helps escaped asylum patient out
clanciai7 November 2018
As a mystery thriller the intrigue is not bad but rather fantastic and incredible, a little bit too overdone in complexity to be convincing, but the Russians actually worked along such lines in the cold war, using all kinds of brainwash techniques including hypnosis. It's all about hypnosis here, the victim wakes up without a memory and is more or less coerced into accepting an alien half Russian identity which he is sure isn't his real one, but he can't find his real one, because his brains have been tampered with.

Cyril Cusack makes an important contribution here as another patient, a doctor persuaded to cooperate with the kidnapping league bribed by unlimited access to whisky, which he accepts since he is a failed doctor and an alcoholic, and he works constantly on getting too tipsy to be able to regret it. The scenes with him and with Ella Raines are the best and most interesting in the film, although Donald Wolfit, as always, impresses with his acting, this time as the overbearing professor, who even one of his doctors finally has some objection against.

It's not a great thriller but interesting as an entertainment, and you will remember Cyril Cusack and Ella Raines better than Derek Farr.
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5/10
Rehashing cliches
malcolmgsw16 December 2019
Derek Farr is ambushed on a road,drugged and told by sinister doctor Donald Woolfit that his memory has gone and that he is someone else.Its a dastardly commie plot to take him to Moscow. Ella Raines,in her last film,is parachuted into the plot after 35 minutes.All very routine.
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