Number Seventeen

Samenvattingen(1)

Following a heist in which a valuable diamond necklace is stolen, a detective (John Stuart) sets off on the trail of the thieves. His life saved by a female member of the gang who has fallen in love with him, the sleuth races against time to reach the gang's hideout - an empty London house known as number 17 - and retrieve the hidden necklace before they do. (Universal Pictures UK)

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Recensie (2)

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D.Moore 

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Engels This Hitchcock film is hugely damaged by its Cimrman (or perhaps Monty Python) excessiveness, which tries to surprise with new twists and turns, but at best makes it laughable, at worst downright ridiculous. If it weren't for all the "shocking" revelations and the almost constant barrage of unnecessary dialogue, Number Seventeen could have been even better. ()

Necrotongue 

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Engels I randomly picked Number Seventeen from a bunch of old British crime films, so I was pretty surprised to see Hitchcock’s name pop up in the opening credits. After the first ten minutes, I couldn’t tell if I was watching a movie or attending a symphony concert with moving pictures in the background. I get it, this film is more like the great-great-grandfather of cinema, but even then, I just couldn’t get into it. If this had been my first Hitchcock experience, I’m not sure I’d be rushing to watch more of his work. The sound effects barely cut through the often overwhelming score, the setting didn’t do much for me (neither the staircase nor the train), and things only got worse with weirdly staged fistfights and even stranger gunplay. By the time the cliché ending rolled around, the whole thing was just kind of a mess. I tossed it a single star, mostly for the experience of seeing something all the way from 1932. / Lesson learned: “We’re all Barton here.” ()