The Good Die Young

For similar titles, see Good Die Young.
The Good Die Young

US 1955 cinema poster
Directed by Lewis Gilbert
Produced by John Woolf
Screenplay by Vernon Harris
Lewis Gilbert
Based on The Good Die Young
by Richard Macauley
Starring Laurence Harvey
Gloria Grahame
Richard Basehart
Joan Collins
John Ireland
Rene Ray
Stanley Baker
Margaret Leighton
Music by Georges Auric
Cinematography Jack Asher
Edited by Ralph Kemplen
Production
company
Distributed by IFD (UK)
United Artists (US)
Release dates
  • 2 March 1954 (1954-03-02) (UK)
  • 29 November 1955 (1955-11-29) (US)
Running time
94 min.
Country United Kingdom
Language English

The Good Die Young is a 1954 British crime thriller film made by Remus Films, featuring a number of American characters. It was directed by Lewis Gilbert. The screenplay was based on the book of the same name written by Richard Macaulay.

The cast includes Laurence Harvey, Gloria Grahame, Joan Collins, Stanley Baker and Richard Basehart.

Plot

The film opens with four men in a car, apparently about to commit a serious crime. How each of the previously law-abiding men came to be in this position is then explored.

Mike (Stanley Baker) is an ageing boxer, in love with his wife (Rene Ray) but injured and unable to find a job. Joe (Richard Basehart) is an out-of-work clerk who needs to fly to the United States with his young wife (Joan Collins) to escape her clinging and unstable mother (Freda Jackson). Eddie (John Ireland) is an AWOL American airman with an unfaithful actress wife (Gloria Grahame). The last man, 'Rave' Ravenscourt (Laurence Harvey), is a 'gentleman' sponger and a scoundrel with gambling debts and the unscrupulous leader who lures the other three. The film reaches a bloody climax at Heathrow Airport.

Principal cast

Production

The film was shot on location in London and at Shepperton Studios, with other scenes of BOAC Boeing Stratocruiser aircraft at Heathrow Airport and the District Line around Barbican. Laurence Harvey subsequently married Margaret Leighton, who played his wife in the film.

The film's screenwriters changed the setting of Richard Macauley's original novel from America to 1950s England. The British bank financing the film also required that the novel's bank robbery be switched to a post office in the film version.[1]

The film opened in the UK on 2 March 1954, with general release following on 5 April.[2]

Notes

  1. Lewis Gilbert Interview Cinema Retro Vol. 7 Issue 19
  2. F Maurice Speed, Film Review 1954-55 Macdonald & Co 1954
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