Scarlet Thread


Scarlet Thread is a 1951 British second feature ('B') crime drama film directed by Lewis Gilbert and produced by Ernest G. Roy. It was written by Moie Charles and A.R. Rawlinson.

Plot

Two criminals plan a jewellery robbery. The robbery goes wrong and an innocent man is shot.

Cast

Production

The film was made at Nettlefold Studios, Walton-on-Thames in Surrey, England, and on location.

Reception

The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "Sydney Tafler and Laurence Harvey do well as the unattractive pair of gangsters, and the characterisation and dialogue are as a whole more effective than the improbable story."
Kine Weekly wrote: "Well-made, if slightly far-fetched romantic melodrama ... Unusual and intriguing story, exciting climax, feminine angle, and quota."
In The Radio Times Guide to Films Allen Eyles gave the film 2/5 stars, writing: "In one of his early leading roles, Laurence Harvey working with Alfie director Lewis Gilbert gives this downbeat British crime drama some modest interest. Harvey is convincingly unpleasant as the skirt-chasing spiv and petty criminal with a sleazy charm, who panics and kills a bystander during a jewel robbery. But the twist in the tale is more implausible than ironic."