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The Dark Tower
The Dark Tower

The Dark Tower (1943)

61% User Rating
1h 30min
Drama
Thriller

While working at a circus, a man hypnotizes a trapezist to kill her partner.

John HarlowDirector

Cast

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Ben Lyon

Ben Lyon

Phil Danton

Anne Crawford

Anne Crawford

Mary

David Farrar

David Farrar

Tom Danton

Herbert Lom

Herbert Lom

Stephen Torg

Frederick Burtwell

Frederick Burtwell

Willie Wainwright

William Hartnell

William Hartnell

Jim Towers (as Bill Hartnell)

The Movie Database

Josephine Wilson

Dora Shogun

Elsie Wagstaff

Elsie Wagstaff

Eve Wainwright (as Elsie Wagstaffe)

J.H. Roberts

J.H. Roberts

Dr. Wilson

Aubrey Mallalieu

Aubrey Mallalieu

Doctor

Reviews (2)

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John Chard
John Chard
Rating 60%

April 18, 2020

The Mesmerising Menace. The Dark Tower is directed by John Harlow and is adapted to screenplay by Brock Williams from the play George S. Kaufman and Alexander Woollcott. It stars Ben Lyon, Anne Crawford, David Farrar, Herbert Lom and William Hartnell. Music is by Jack Beaver and cinematography by Otto Heller. A failing circus employs a mysterious hypnotist to boost the coffers, which with his skills working superbly makes the show a huge success. However, as Torg (Lom) begins to realise his worth to the show, and starts to make designs on the leading lady of the high-wire act, things quickly turn nasty... The play of the same name had already been adapted to the big screen in 1934, where titled as "The Man with Two Faces" it was directed by Archie Mayo and starred Edward G. Robinson. Here this version differs, but on core principals the story remains thematically the same. It's not a particularly strong plot, with it being a variation on the Svengali story, it never really breaks free of safe narrative projection. Yet it's well constructed by Harlow and in fourth billed Lom (the acting highlight by some distance) the pic has a character to really boo and hiss at. Comic relief comes in the form of Frederick Burtwell and Elsie Wagstaff as a married couple dominated by the wife, while all the various circus acts we see, notably Crawford's high-wire hypnotised balancing act (well shot for breath holding rewards), are hugely enjoyable - even if some come off as padded filler. Having the talents of Heller on photography duties is a plus point, he knows how to light a scene for atmospheric gain, though he would be seen at his noirish best in "Queen of Spades (1949)". While of note is that ace Hammer Horror director Terence Fisher is on editing duty here, though he certainly was a better director than an editor... It's no must see unless you be a fan of the stars, mainly Lom in this instance, but in spite of a daft revelation at pic's end, this is above average and holds its own as a competent circus based thriller. 6/10

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