Guilt Is My Shadow
Guilt Is My Shadow
NR | 08 July 1951 (USA)
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A woman is haunted by her conscience after she murders a man and then hides the body. Based on the novel 'You're Best Alone' by Norah Lofts.

Reviews
Smartorhypo

Highly Overrated But Still Good

Matialth

Good concept, poorly executed.

Curapedi

I cannot think of one single thing that I would change about this film. The acting is incomparable, the directing deft, and the writing poignantly brilliant.

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Janis

One of the most extraordinary films you will see this year. Take that as you want.

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trimmerb1234

Bad boy Peter Reynolds has a back story - would be getaway driver who panics and leaves his companions to be caught bang to rights outside the bank. Unusually this important bit of action with which the film starts never comes back to bite him nor play any further part. He instead swans off to Devon to cadge lodgings from his rather estranged bachelor shotgun-toting uncle who though surly nevertheless does the decent thing.Something Reynolds does not reciprocate, casually thieving from all who put any trust in him. An unexpected visitor in form of an attractive young woman (Elizabeth Sellars) arrives who he mistreats, giving great offence to his uncle. The bad boy departs the scene, leaving just the young woman remaining with the uncle. Later another unexpected visitor, an older woman arrives and joins the two. The situation, for good reasons, is exceedingly uncomfortable indeed impossible for all three.Beautifully shot on location, it is a pleasure to watch. The story is perhaps old-fashioned, resembling in outline at least a Victorian novel particularly the stiff-upper lipped decent rather taciturn uncle. But it is 1950 and rural rather than city ways so is believable. However modern viewers evidently find the moral dilemmas tiresome and the lack of violent action (spoiler alert - the shotgun is neither fired nor even brandished) in consequence boring. But if you see through the eyes of the participants, it is quite gripping at times and end completely believable.

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Marlburian

I'm prejudiced in favour of GIMS because a lot of it was filmed in Devon c1950, just before I moved to the county, and I'm prone to nostalgia. I liked the scenes shot in Ashburton and the agricultural fair - very evocative of simpler - perhaps happier - times.Putting aside the Devon content, the film is a reasonable post-war low-budget film. Before seeing it, I hadn't been aware of Peter Reynolds, who came over as a type like David McCallum in his young tearabout roles. Elizabeth Sellars reminded me a little of Joan Collins, but nicer. And in a pub scene one can glimpse "Q" himself - Desmond Llewelyn. Apart from the token Devonshire accent, everyone seemed to speak every so nicely.Film industry conventions of the time demanded that people should pay for their crimes, whatever the provocation, and there were no great surprises at the end.The only jarring note was the scene in the foggy churchyard.GIMS was one of the best things I saw on TV over the Christmas-New Year period - which may not say much for everything else!Incidentally, there's a brief scene of a small train arriving at "Welford Station" - perhaps the branch line terminus at Ashburton. There was actually a Welford Park station on the Lambourn Valley Railway, north west of Newbury, that served the hamlet of Welford.

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kidboots

What started out as a typical police pursuit ended up as a Gothic nightmare with eerie dream sequences, obviously a homage to those "Gainsborough Gothic" style movies that were so popular in Britain after the war.Jamie is on the run from a robbery gone wrong, even in the first few seconds his cowardly nature is revealed as he takes off, leaving his partners in crime stranded on the bank steps, when he hears a police whistle. He quickly travels up north to visit his taciturn Uncle Kit (Patrick Holt) on his farm in a remote little community. From a few small scenes - disregarding a "Close the Gate" sign, mishandling a horse, big noting himself at the pub to pilfering the till at the garage where he has managed to find work because of his dexterity with cars - a picture is painted of a scheming lout who the audience has no sympathy for. Suddenly Linda appears, his wife he says and for once he is not lying but she is as pretty and decent as Jamie is sly and calculating.Once Elizabeth Sellars steps out of the car and is captivated by the wild, vast landscape, the focus of the film changes. She was a fresh, young film face whose ethereal look was used to advantage here and with scenes showing her compassion for an injured dog or a cow having a difficult birth, she fits right into the farming life. Linda's arrival doesn't phase Jamie who has just started seeing the local rich, bad girl Betty (Lana Morris started out in the 1940s with plenty of promise but spent the 1950s in Bs) and has already stolen funds to show her a good time. Linda finds him stealing money from Kit's safe and stands up to him - things get physical and Jamie is accidentally killed. The rest of the movie turns into a guilt ridden manifesto. Kit and Linda already have feelings for each other and together they try to wipe the crime from the face of the earth. Linda's guilty conscience arises in a series of dreams where she is running through the church-yard, falling into the abyss and standing against craggy rocks and there is a nightmarish, Gothic quality about them. Then Jamie's mother turns up...............Peter Reynolds who played the cowardly Jamie unfortunately died at 45 in a flat fire. He had moved to Sydney, Australia in the early 1970s and was a fixture of the small screen in shows like "Boney", "Division 4", "The Rovers", "Barrier Reef" and "Homicide".

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malcolmgsw

Jamie the bad sheep of the family gets involved in a robbery and flees to his relatives farm in the west country.subsequently his wife arrives.however the wife falls for farm life and Patrick Holt simultaneously.The wife finds Jamie stealing money from a tin box.she struggles with him and eventually hits him on the head.he dies and is buried on the farm.his absence is noted and eventually the police come to search the farm but cannot find the body.however in one of those logic defying moments that happen so often in films of that era it is clear that the wife will confess to the police.it is extremely slow and in the end rather dull and disappointing.

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