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The Ghost Camera

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Director
  
Bernard Vorhaus

Producer
  
Julius Hagen

Duration
  

Country
  
United Kingdom

6.2/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Comedy, Crime, Mystery

Cinematography
  
Ernest Palmer

Language
  
English

The Ghost Camera movie poster

Writer
  
Joseph Jefferson Farjeon
,
H. Fowler Mear

Release date
  
September 1933 (UK) 1934 (US)

Cast
  
Henry Kendall
(John Gray),
Ida Lupino
(Mary Elton),
John Mills
(Ernest Elton),
Victor Stanley
(Albert Sims),
George Merritt
(Police Detective),
Felix Aylmer
(Coroner)

Similar movies
  
Henry Kendall and others appear in The Ghost Camera and The Shadow

The Ghost Camera is a 1933 British mystery film directed by Bernard Vorhaus, starring Henry Kendall, Ida Lupino and John Mills, and based on "A Mystery Narrative", a short story by Joseph Jefferson Farjeon.

Contents

The Ghost Camera httpsimagesnasslimagesamazoncomimagesI5

Despite being made quickly on a low budget, the film has come to be considered as one of the most successful Quota quickies made during the Thirties.

Plot summary

While driving back from a seaside holiday, a young man discovers that a camera has dropped mysteriously into his car. When he develops the negatives, one of the pictures appears to show a murder taking place while the others offer clues to where the event has taken place.

After identifying one of the women in the pictures, she and he go on a search through the countryside to try to locate her missing brother whose camera they believe it to be. Unfortunately, the police also appear to be on his trail, believing that he has just committed a robbery at a jewellery shop.

Cast

  • Henry Kendall as John Gray
  • Ida Lupino as Mary Elton
  • John Mills as Ernest Elton
  • Victor Stanley as Albert Sims
  • George Merritt as Police Detective
  • Felix Aylmer as Coroner
  • Davina Craig as Amelia Wilkinson, a maid
  • Fred Groves as Barnaby Rudd, landlord
  • Production

    The film was made at Julius Hagen's Twickenham Studios as part of a long-term contract to provide films for the American major studio RKO enabling it to comply with the terms of the Cinematograph Films Act 1927. Most such films were cheaply made supporting features which became known as "quota quickies". Hagen's Twickenham company developed a reputation as a leading producer of popular quota quickies.

    The film's director, Bernard Vorhaus, had arrived in Britain from America in 1930 and established himself as a director of quota films in Britain's rapidly growing film industry. His films became notable for featuring rapid editing and location shooting, both of which were relatively rare for supporting films.

    Reception

    The film premièred in September 1933 at MGM's flagship Empire Cinema in Leicester Square as the supporting feature on a double bill headed by Turn Back the Clock. It was met by a hostile reception by the audience. However, when the film went on general release it proved popular with audiences and in a number of cinemas it was given top-billing.

    References

    The Ghost Camera Wikipedia
    The Ghost Camera IMDb The Ghost Camera themoviedb.org