West 11

The "Greenwich Village townhouse explosion" at 18 West 11th Street redirects here. James Merrill's poem, "18 West 11th Street", redirects here.
West 11
Directed by Michael Winner
Produced by Daniel M. Angel
Written by Willis Hall
Keith Waterhouse
Based on play by Laura del Rivo
Starring Alfred Lynch
Kathleen Breck
Eric Portman
Diana Dors
Kathleen Harrison
Music by Stanley Black
Cinematography Otto Heller
Edited by Bernard Gribble
Production
company
Associated British Picture Corporation
Angel Productions (as Dial)
Distributed by Warner-Pathé Distributors (UK)
Release dates
8 October 1963 (London) (UK)
Running time
93 minutes
Country United Kingdom
Language English

West 11 is a 1963 British crime film directed by Michael Winner and based on a play (The Furnished Room) written by Laura del Rivo and adapted for the screen by Willis Hall and Keith Waterhouse. The film features Alfred Lynch, Kathleen Breck, Eric Portman, Diana Dors, and Kathleen Harrison.[1] Set in west London, the title is taken from the postcode W11, and it was filmed on location in Notting Hill.

Plot

In Notting Hill's jazz club, coffee bar and bedsit land of the early 1960s, Joe Beckett is a young unemployed misfit and drifter whose life takes a turn for the worse when he encounters Richard Dyce, an ex-army veteran. Dyce persuades Beckett it will be in his interests to bump off Dyce's wealthy aunt for her money. Beckett travels to the old lady's house on the South coast, and prepares to murder her, but loses his nerve and in a struggle, accidentally pushes her down a flight of stairs, killing her anyway. After a witness reports him, Beckett returns to his digs and finds the police waiting for him. Dyce denies all involvement and Beckett panics and turns himself in.

Cast

Critical reception

The Radio Times wrote, "Michael Winner's skirmish with British social realism shows what life was like in the bedsits of Notting Hill, years before Julia Roberts showed up. The script is mostly a series of loosely connected sketches, though the film's sole virtue nowadays is the location camerawork of Otto Heller that captures the then peeling and shabbily converted Regency houses that were riddled with dry rot and Rachmanism, which exchanged squalor for extortionate rents. Stanley Black and Acker Bilk's music adds a cloying note to a movie that rarely rises above basement level";[2] but Variety noted, "it has its merits. The sleazy London locations are very authentically shown. Perhaps too authentically." [3]

External links

References

  1. "West 11". BFI.
  2. Adrian Turner. "West 11". RadioTimes.
  3. "West 11". Variety.


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