Passport to Treason (1956) Poster

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6/10
Fun emulation of American noir
Leofwine_draca23 June 2016
PASSPORT TO TREASON is a fun, densely-plotted little British thriller which heavily emulates the American detective noir films of the 1940s; imported Canadian lead Rod Cameron even contributes a voice over narrative in the opening scenes. It's a fairly standard film of its type, but it has a dense little plot and plenty of suspense to see it through, plus a cracking supporting cast.

The tall and pudgy Cameron makes for an imposing presence as the private eye lead; more of a heavy than a hero, he slugs and pushes his way through the villainous members of the plot, who are part of an Italian gang determined to thwart the efforts of a 'peace organisation' of some type. Along the way, he hooks up with a pre-Bond Lois Maxwell, who is at her most beautiful and intelligent in this film.

There are fist-fights a-plenty, alongside character twists and various other scenarios which work out well. Fans of the genre will know exactly what they're in for and they won't be disappointed. The supporting cast includes Clifford Evans (THE 20 QUESTIONS MURDER MYSTERY) as the leader of the slightly bizarre 'peace organisation' and Douglas Wilmer (THE BRIDES OF FU MANCHU) as a doctor. Ballard Berkeley plays one of his stock policeman roles and there's a minor part for popular Canadian TV actor John Colicos (who looks very young) as a thug. PASSPORT TO TREASON certainly isn't a work of high art but it's a lot of fun all the same.
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5/10
"The truth is what I tell you"
hwg1957-102-2657045 October 2018
Warning: Spoilers
A private detective Mike O'Kelly stumbles into a mystery in a foggy London night on his way to meet a fellow investigator who is also a friend. He finds his friend has been killed. A dropped passport leads him to answers about his friend's death which involve a secret neo-Nazi ring and the activities of the International League For World Peace. The film starts well but rambles routinely to a not unexpected climax. There are a couple of twists in the plot that are quite foreseeable.

Imported American actor Rod Cameron as O'Kelly lumbers about in a dull manner. Good support does come from Lois Maxwell, Clifford Evans and the ubiquitous Marianne Stone but they don't have enough to do to raise the film up from being routine. Douglas Wilmer as the smooth and deadly Dr. Randolph has the best part. The cinematography by co-producer Monty Berman is fine with some efficient location shooting but on the whole the film is a chore to sit through. Berman and the other co-producer Robert S. Baker made other films together that are much better.
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5/10
Derivative But OK
boblipton22 March 2020
Rod Cameron is a private investigator in London -- not a horse in sight. When a friend of his is killed, he takes it upon himself to investigate, despite the disapproval of Scotland Yard. His hunt sends him to an international peace organization that seems to have peculiar connections.

Based on a novel by Manning O'Brine, the movie seems to be a mashup of other, better remembered movies: MURDER, MY SWEET and FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT are two of the obvious ones. Cameron is pretty good, following pretty Lois Maxwell around, but he can sure bounce back from a beating and drugging pretty fast. There's nothing else to complain about in this competent B picture.... but nothing to get excited over either. It's another decent time-waster.
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The trappings of an awkward American film noir--set in foggy London!!
secondtake8 August 2011
Passport to Treason (1956)

Boy is this an obvious attempt to be something that it can't quite be. That is, it's a low budget off-beat British movie with an American main character acting like a tough film noir detective. The London fog is thick, the femme fatale (in a nightclub) is cool and mysterious, the police are bothered but mostly clueless, and a crew of Italians are interfering with some kind of anti-peace movement. It even starts with a voice-over, at night, with a laconic world weariness that Bogart made so famous in a couple of his early detective thrillers for Warner Bros.

"Passport to Treason" is moody and not terrible, but if you like all the usual touch points of an American detective noir, you'd be better of with the real deal, of which there are so many better ones, even low budget ones like this. But for now, here we are, and the dark drama is enough to keep things going much of the time. Of course, it would help to have a compelling main character, and the large, deep voiced detective is played by a bit of a bore, Rod Cameron. He has the voice and pace of Lon Chaney Jr. without the sympathetic aura. Of course, since he's American he can take out three well prepared Italian thugs in a warehouse without any trouble, and he can solve the crime even the police don't quite know how to get at.

The main trick is that Cameron's character has stepped into another detective's shoes. So it starts with a deception. Then the Italians try some kind of mind control, coming out of the brainwashing scares of the Korean War I suppose. And at first he works for one client, then another, never quite getting paid for all his back and forth. And behind it all is an international underground group working for world peace. That's right. It's a noble but slightly abstract idea, maybe more tangible in Europe in the 50s than here, then or now, in the U.S. But it's hard to get involved. Eventually things resolve, and that's that.

Honestly, what is really interesting here is just the way a film noir cliché translates into a British realm. The cars and accents are different, but so is a certain feel to the actors and their style. Don't expect much.
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4/10
More like mid Atlantic
malcolmgsw20 July 2008
In the 1950s it was quite popular in this country to import fading American stars to give the film a bit of a boost at the box office here and to give the film a chance of being sold to a distributor in America.It has to be said that there seems to be a line of descent for American actors.Starting out as leading men,then gravitating to Westerns and then making the trip over to the UK to give films a boost for reasons stated above.However films like this really did not have much chance in any territory.the problem is that for a film of fairly modest ambitions it is really over plotted.You just tend to loose interest in the whole thing after about 20 minutes.So not really worth bothering with.
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6/10
"Good work O'Kelly!"
richardchatten30 December 2021
Lois Maxwell was still working in the field in Berman & Baker's final Cold War quickie for Tempean; the Moneypenny role taken on by Marianne Stone (just before her nose job) in a more substantial and good-humoured role than she usually got to play.
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5/10
Dull as dishwater!
JohnHowardReid25 March 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Director: ROBERT S. BAKER. Screenplay: Kenneth Hales, Norman Hudis. Based on a novel by Manning O'Brine. Photography: Monty Berman. Film editor: Henry Richardson. Music director: Stanley Black. Blues by Hugo Bird and James Lubbock. Camera operator: Desmond Dickinson. Art director: John Stoll. Wardrobe: Jean Fairnel. Set continuity: Gladys Reeve. Production manager: Roger Marley. Sound recording: W.H. Lindop. Producers: Robert S. Baker, Monty Berman. A Mid-Century Production.

Released in the U.K. by Eros (July, 1956), in the U.S. by Astor (June, 1956). 7,258 feet. 80 minutes. Cut to 70 minutes in the U.S.A.

COMMENT: A slackly directed British "B" thriller, boasting a complicated and extremely unlikely plot. Although filmed on some potentially interesting actual locations, they are not very dramatically employed. Lovely Lois Maxwell proves the brightest feature of this otherwise rather dull film.

OTHER VIEWS: Where do old cowboy stars go when they get too old for the saddle? The rodeo circuit? The circus? Film fairs? Heaven? Or Walton-on-Thames, the home of Eros? Sample dialogue: ROD: I can't make up my mind about you. You could be on the level. LOIS: I could be. ROD: All right, I'll gamble.
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7/10
The same old story about organized crime getting rounded up
clanciai12 February 2023
Rod Cameron certainly is no Bogart and rather make an impression like Fred MacMurray all miscast and out of place in the fogs of London, where he gets kidnapped and drugged with some bogus truth serum while he nevertheless only can produce mumbles, that will not satisfy the hoodlum gang he has run into, which proves to be some international fascist league working under cover of some impeccable peace organization - there will be no peace here, only hard knuckles, murders and gunfire. The film is saved by Lois Maxwell who works on both sides, employed as a secretary by the organization and supplying the police with information. The Italians are interesting here, caught in the spiral of organized crime and trying desperately to get away, one after the other getting caught in the slaughter. It's a bleak copy of more organized noir films, there is not even much cinematography here except for the fog, and Rod Cameron will make you yawn when he doesn't use his knuckles. The story is weak routine stuff, you have seen it all before, while only Lois Maxwell is interesting.
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8/10
Good British B-Noir
TondaCoolwal30 December 2021
O. K. Rod Cameron is no Bogart, but his burly transatlantic presence helps this British B-thriller tick along nicely. Utilising that British staple - fog, P. I. Mike O'Kelly is accosted by three men in quick succession when on his way to see pal Ben Connor. The last man drops a passport and, we're on our way. Connor is found dead by O'Kelly and to save time he follows up on the passport, leaving secretary Jonesy (Marianne Stone) to tell the police. Another British staple of the fifties is introduced; a gang of neo-nazis hiding within a peace organization. Femme fatale ( Diane Boyd (Lois Maxwell) drapes herself pleasingly on the bar in the smoky atmosphere of the Stella Lupari Club. She is obviously involved and leads O'Kelly on a merry, not to mention life-threatening, dance. But what about the mysterious Orlando Syms (Clifford Evans)? The shady Dr Randolph (Douglas Wilmer) and the obviously terrified owner of the passport Amedeo Sacchi (Derek Sydney)? Not forgetting the stereotypical gang of murderously-inclined Italians who can't fight their way out of a paper bag, let alone get past Mike's clubbing right fist! What is the meaning of the list of numbers? Is anyone really what they seem to be? Can anyone be trusted? No! That's what makes the story! From the Berman/Baker stable who made a lot of these entertaining thrillers; they moved on to produce the, very successful, Saint tv series in the sixties. In fact, substitute Roger Moore for Cameron, tweak the script a little, and you have a typical Saint episode. Half of the rest of the cast also appeared regularly in various episodes. A good old-fashioned thriller with no profanity or gratuitous sex, and just complicated enough to keep you on the hook.
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