The Silent Passenger
The Silent Passenger | |
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Directed by | Reginald Denham |
Written by | Basil Mason |
Produced by | Hugh Perceval |
Starring | John Loder Peter Haddon |
Cinematography | Jan Stallich |
Edited by | Thorold Dickinson |
Music by | Percival Mackey |
Release date |
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Running time | 75 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
The Silent Passenger is a British black-and-white mystery film produced in 1935 at Ealing Studios, London.[1] This was the first film outing for novelist Dorothy L. Sayers' fictional amateur sleuth Lord Peter Wimsey.[citation needed] It was based on an original story written by Sayers specifically for the screen. Her amateur sleuth was portrayed as a somewhat eccentric comical aristocrat who solved murders in spite of himself.
Plot
A blackmailer is murdered by the husband of one of his victims, railway detective Henry Camberley (Donald Wolfit), but it is the innocent John Ryder (John Loder) who is suspected of the murder when Camberley puts the dead body into his trunk. After making the casual acquaintance of Ryder, amateur detective Lord Peter Wimsey (Peter Haddon) sets about proving his friend's innocence. All these events take place while on a train trip from London to the English Channel, with Ryder acting as "bait" to flush out the real killer and solve the murder.
Cast
- John Loder as John Ryder
- Peter Haddon as Lord Peter Wimsey
- Lilian Oldland as Mollie Ryder (billed as Mary Newland)
- Donald Wolfit as Henry Camberley
- Austin Trevor as Chief Inspector Parker
- Leslie Perrins as Maurice Windermere
- Aubrey Mather as Bunter
- Robb Wilton as Porter
- Ralph Truman as Saunders
- Ann Codrington as Desk Clerk
- George De Warfaz as Chief of French Police
- Annie Esmond as Old Lady Passenger with Pekinese Dogs
- Dorice Fordred as Camberley's Accomplice
- Vincent Holman as Works Manager
- Gordon McLeod as Commissioner
- Frederick Burtwell (uncredited)
- Percy Rhodes (uncredited)
References
- ^ "Silent Passenger, The". The Complete Index To World Film since 1895. Alan Goble. Retrieved 17 January 2008.