The Gambler and the Lady

NR 5.9
1952 1 hr 12 min Drama , Thriller , Crime

A greedy but successful professional gambler wants to join the British Establishment when he falls in love with a blue-blooded lady. But first he must mend his ways and then dump his nightclub singer girl friend. She's not so easy to get rid of, neither is his past.

  • Cast:
    Dane Clark , Kathleen Byron , Naomi Chance , Meredith Edwards , Anthony Forwood , Eric Pohlmann , Julian Somers

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Reviews

GurlyIamBeach
1952/12/26

Instant Favorite.

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Stoutor
1952/12/27

It's not great by any means, but it's a pretty good movie that didn't leave me filled with regret for investing time in it.

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Aneesa Wardle
1952/12/28

The story, direction, characters, and writing/dialogue is akin to taking a tranquilizer shot to the neck, but everything else was so well done.

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Matho
1952/12/29

The biggest problem with this movie is it’s a little better than you think it might be, which somehow makes it worse. As in, it takes itself a bit too seriously, which makes most of the movie feel kind of dull.

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wes-connors
1952/12/30

After he is apparently shot and hit by a car, we meet shady Dane Clark (as Jim Forster). An American in London, Mr. Clark operates a successful gambling casino. Clark served three years in prison because he got "crazy drunk" and beat a man to death. He would like to be accepted in polite society, but Clark still has a temper. He also talks like a Warner Brothers movie gangster, which doesn't help in "manners school." Clark decides to end his affair with common nightclub dancer Kathleen Byron (as Pat) and get intimate with classy socialite Naomi Chance (as Susan Willens). Underworld types give Clark a hard time...Writer Sam Newfield delivers some interesting characters here, especially upper-crust Anthony Forwood (as Peter Willens), who could be a con-man, and mean-looking henchman Meredith Edwards (as Dave Davies), who has a devilish haircut. Still, the production is weak. The women should be more interesting, but are late and sketchy. It would have been nice to see more of both Ms. Byron and Ms. Chance. Byron could easily have been in more of the early scenes, to establish her upfront as Clark's precarious moll. The opening turns out to be a teaser; later in the film, we get see who wanted Clark dead. Sadly, you may not care.***** The Gambler and the Lady (12/26/52) Sam Newfield ~ Dane Clark, Naomi Chance, Anthony Forwood, Meredith Edwards

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Spikeopath
1952/12/31

The Gambler and the Lady is directed by Patrick Jenkins and Sam Newfield, the latter of which also writing the screenplay. It stars Dane Clark, Kathleen Byron, Naomi Chance, Meredith Edwards, Anthony Forwood and Eric Pohlmann. Music is by Ivor Stanley and cinematography by Walter J. Harvey.Clark plays Jim Forster, an ex-con and reformed alcoholic who is trying to climb the social ladder by way of his thriving gambling business. But all that is threatened when new gangsters on the scene want in on the action. Not only that but he also has a jealous ex-girlfriend to contend with just as he meets and falls for the blue blooded Lady Susan Willens (Chance).On the page it sounds terrific, a real chance for some noir nirvana, while the opening to the film is a cracker, with a moody night time cobbled street scene punctured by a hit and run collision. Yet the piece never rises above the routine crime thriller that it is, while visually it's flat and uninteresting.Out of Hammer Film Productions, there's an attempt at class distinction to drive the narrative forward, but it never really develops into something resembling dramatic worth. A shame because Jim Forster is an interesting enough character, he has done time for manslaughter, has anger issues but now he hates the rough stuff, even admonishing his staff for handing out bumps to bad debtors. And the women love him as well. Yet it's all so lethargically played that come the finale, the culmination of the dangled carrot at the beginning, you will struggle to care anyway. 5/10

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mark.waltz
1953/01/01

I diagnose this low-budget British crime drama as film noir. Symptoms: A social climbing gangster; Rackateers determined to muck their way into a share of his profits; a vindictive ex-lover out for blood; An ingénue from snobbish high society with a few hidden cards up her own sleeve. Prognosis: Can't be cured of diagnosis, but can be prolonged by re-discovery of a film noir sleeper.American diamond in the rough Dane Clark falls under the spell of British high society, dumping his co-dependent lover (Kathleen Byron) for the seemingly gentler Naomi Chance. Her snobby brother gets him involved in a phony stock scheme while a racketeer tries to muscle in. Chance gets an earful from the nasty Byron but turns the tables on her in a wonderfully vicious scene. Exciting from the start, this little known film noir grabs you and does not let go, moving practically at the speed of light.You think that Lizabeth Scott, Gloria Grahame, Martha Vickers and Jan Sterling had the ball on low society tramps? Wait until you meet Ms. Byron who is not somebody who takes no lightly. And Chance isn't some namby pamby ingénue, either. She can give as good as she gets. Clark is given an extremely well developed character to play, and you find yourself liking him even if you really should avoid him like the plague.

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J. Spurlin
1953/01/02

A social-climbing American (Dane Clark) with a business in illegal gambling falls in love with a blue blood (Naomi Chance), but gangsters and a jealous ex-girlfriend (Kathleen Byron) stand in the way of happiness."The Gambler and the Lady" is a typically weak attempt by the Hammer studio to replicate American crime films. A mildly exciting climax (part of which is shown at the beginning) is the only thing that livens up this dull affair. I would have liked to see more of Percy Marmont, who was so good as Col. Burgoyne in Alfred Hitchcock's "Young and Innocent." Here he only gets a brief part as Chance's father.

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