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No Trees in the Street

United Kingdom

1959

96 Min
Black and White
1.37:1
English
  • Currently 2.0/5 Stars.
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DIR J. Lee Thompson

PROD Frank Godwin

SCR Ted Willis

DP Gilbert Taylor

CAST Sylvia Syms, Herbert Lom, Melvyn Hayes, Ronald Howard, Stanley Holloway, Joan Miller, Liam Redmond, David Hemmings

ED Richard Best

MUSIC Laurie Johnson

Synopsis

Told in flashback, the film returns to pre-war Kennedy Street in London. Fiery tearaway Tommy (Melvyn Hayes) talks big and dreams of a life of crime as a route out of the slums and poverty. Tommy’s naive mother, Jess (Joan Miller), foolishly sends her son to work for local hoodlum Wilkie (Herbert Lom), who quickly grooms the boy for life in the underworld by employing him as a driver. Wilkie is romantically interested in Tommy’s earnest sister, Hetty (Sylvia Syms), but refuses her pleas not to involve her brother in crime. On his first solo job, Tommy robs a lorry driver and decides to keep the cash for himself.

Tommy eventually returns home flaunting his money, and when confronted by Wilkie and his family, pulls a gun on them. When Hetty threatens to leave home, her morally bankrupt mother gets the girl drunk and leaves her inebriated daughter to be seduced by Wilkie. Local policeman, Det Sgt Frank Colllins (Ronald Howard), believes there is some good in Hetty and attempts to convince her to help Tommy – but Wilkie arrives to humiliate her. Meanwhile, Tommy murders a storekeeper and he returns home to his mother and sister. Shortly the police have their home surrounded. —Britmovie.co.uk

Director

Original

J. Lee Thompson

John Lee Thompson (1 August 1914 – 30 August 2002), better known as J. Lee Thompson, was an English film director, active in England and Hollywood.

Thompson was born in Bristol, England to a theatrical family. After studying at Dover College, he briefly appeared on the stage and wrote crime plays in his spare time. Thompson first drew critical notice when his play Double Error was staged on the West End of London in 1935, upon which he was hired as a scriptwriter for British International Pictures, acquirer of the play’s film rights. During this initial BIP stint, Thompson made his only film appearance in the Carol Reed-directed Midshipman Easy (1935) and worked as a dialogue coach for Alfred Hitchcock’s production of Jamaica Inn (1939).

The small-framed Englishman was occupied during World War II as a tailgunner and wireless operator for the Royal Air Force. He eventually returned to his scriptwriting duties at the Associated British Picture Corporation, a successor of… read more

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