Although the Network DVD seems to have been well received
when it was released in July 2013, I found it disappointing. Even with a
talented cast on show, which included Stanley Baker, Peter Cushing, Mai Zetterling,
Eric Portman and in smaller rolls Nigel Green and Alfred Burke most of whom,
with varying success, attempting to speak with German accents. I felt that The
Man Who Finally Died (1962) did not rise above a rather lumbering
mystery drama. In fact most of the cast were a little stilted in their
portrayal of characters that were first seen in a 1959 Television series. Two 30-minute
episodes of which were shown in September of that year. The first called The Call and the other called The Gloves with Quentin Lawrence, who
was also responsible for directing the feature film, directing The Call.
Lawrence was best known for his TV work on episodes of
series like The Avengers, Danger Man and The Baron. Except for a highly rated B-movie made in 1961 called Cash on Demand his remaining body of
work in feature films was not well received and The Man Who Finally Died is particular uninspired. This cold war
tale does not build up the tension a story like this deserves.
Stanley Baker plays a London based jazz musician called Joe
Newman, a naturalised Briton who has lived in England since the beginning of
WW2. This individual deserved a more emotional portrayal from Baker that would
have given a more demonstrative feel to the character. Newman always assumed
that his German father had been killed on the Russian front twenty years ago
but he receives a telephone call from the Bavarian town of Konigsbaded from a
man calling himself Kurt Deutsch – the name of his dead father! Traveling to
the German town Newman uncovers a mystery that gets ever deeper, and one that
certainly confuses not only Joe Newman but also this blogger! ‘But
his search for the truth proves more disturbing than he could ever imagined’[1]
Not quite I’m afraid!!
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