
Based on a Winston Graham novel, (he of "Marnie" fame), Eric Till's
"The Walking Stick" is, perhaps surprisingly, a good psychological
thriller that came and went without too many people seeing it. Okay,
Till was no Hitchcock, (this was only his second feature after the
excellent, and again little-seen and underrated, "Hot Millions"), and
the film does suffer from a little too much soft-focus prettiness at
times but he does make great use of his London locations, draws first-
rate
performances from leads David Hemmings and Samantha Eggar and ensures
the thriller plot builds to a reasonably satisfactory climax.
Eggar is the girl whose early polio means she has to use the walking
stick of the title and Hemmings is the not particularly good painter she
meets at a party. They start a romance but then she begins to suspect
he may not be all that he first seemed. Others caught up in proceedings
include Emlyn Williams as Hemmings' shady 'patron' and Phyllis Calvert
as Eggar's somewhat aloof mother. It's certainly no classic but it is
also much better than its original reputation might have suggested and
is worth seeking out.
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