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Synopsis

Cage of Gold is a modestly melodramatic story directed by Dearden, who had a reputation for being the most adept of Ealing film-makers in constructing something showy out of unpromising material. It provided a vehicle for Jean Simmons, playing a young artist infatuated by a caddish ex-RAF officer who makes her pregnant and then marries her so that he can get her money. When he learns that she has none, he disappears to continue philandering in Paris. His passport is used by a smuggler whose plane crashes and, thinking he is dead, the girl marries a steadfast doctor who is prepared to bring up the child. Two years later her first husband turns up in London having left his French mistress, and threatens to blackmail the couple. He is shot, and both of them confess to having done it, but the real killer is the French girl, who has followed him to London.

The film ends with the doctor and his wife continuing in socially worthy setting of Battersea where he is a National Health Service practitioner, having scorned the possibilities of a career in Harley Street. Cage of Gold is the name of the French night-club where Farrar’s girl friend is a cabaret singer, but it could also be said to symbolise the money trap, and the suggestion that wealth cannot buy happiness. —Britmovie.co.uk

Director

Original

Basil Dearden

Basil Dearden (born Basil Clive Dear; 1 January 1911 – 23 March 1971) was an English film director.

Dearden was born at Westcliff-on-Sea, Essex. He graduated from theatre direction to film, working as an assistant to Basil Dean. He later changed his own name to Dearden to avoid confusion with his mentor.

He first began working as a director at Ealing Studios, co-directing comedy films with Will Hay, including The Goose Steps Out (1942) and My Learned Friend (1943). He worked on the influential chiller compendium Dead of Night (1945) and directed the linking narrative and the “Hearse Driver” segment. He also directed The Captive Heart starring Michael Redgrave, a 1946 British war drama, produced by Ealing Studios. The film was entered into the 1946 Cannes Film Festival. The Blue Lamp (1950), probably the most frequently shown of Dearden’s Ealing films, is a police drama which first introduced audiences to PC George Dixon, later resurrected for the long-running Dixon of… read more

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