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Robert Hamer

Director

 

Biography

A former editor with a flair for both darkly satirical comedy and even darker British film noir, Robert Hamer was a key figure in postwar British cinema. His sensitive talent was probably best showcased in the handsome and witty period-set comedy of murders, “Kind Hearts and Coronets” (1949) and the realistic yet superbly moody noir “It Always Rains on Sunday” (1947). Hamer was also responsible for what some critics consider the best segment in the classic horror anthology, “Dead of Night” (1945), in which a haunted mirror keeps displaying a murder committed long ago, and which begins to take possession of its new owner. Among other films, the adult and complexly plotted “The Spider and the Fly” (1949) and the witty and civilized detective comedy “Father Brown” (1954) stand out. Unfortunately, Hamer’s highly promising career was derailed by an alcohol problem and he died at the age of 52. —TCM 

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Guy Budziak

14Oct11

Looking forward to catching up with Hamer's Pink String and Sealing Wax. One film absent from those shown above that deserves attention is The Long Memory, every bit as good as It Always Rains On Sunday, perhaps in some ways even better. I also agree with the biographer who singled out The Spider and the Fly, another of Hamer's films I happen to like.

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