Intent to Kill (1958) Poster

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7/10
INTENT TO KILL (Jack Cardiff, 1958) ***
Bunuel19763 September 2011
This was legendary British cinematographer Cardiff's official directorial debut after his involvement in Errol Flynn's aborted pet project, THE STORY OF WILLIAM TELL in 1953. Although I have had to make do with a barely serviceable copy culled from a VHS-sourced transmission off of US TV channel "American Movie Classics", this is quite a good thriller that deserves rediscovery.

While the plot is hardly original – being a rehash of STATE SECRET and CRISIS (both 1950) – the good cast and suspenseful narrative twists (courtesy of late screenwriter Jimmy Sangster) make for an enjoyably engrossing 90 minutes. Despite being a British production, it is mostly set in a Canadian hospital, where various attempts are made on the life of South American leader Herbert Lom (who had also appeared in the afore-mentioned STATE SECRET!) who has been admitted there, supposedly incognito, to undergo brain surgery. Among the surgeons operating on him are Richard Todd, Betsy Drake (then Mrs. Cary Grant, who was the star of CRISIS!) and Alexander Knox; on the other side of the spectrum are a hired trio of assassins: Warren Stevens, John Crawford (later the brutish gangster on the run in Hammer's HELL IS A CITY {1960}) and Peter Arne (who would himself graduate to playing notable villains).

Thankfully, the tense interaction between the incompatible band of villains make up for the double helping of soap opera elements to be found in Todd's wife getting hysterically threatening after discovering his unspoken feelings for Drake and, consequently, his unwillingness to leave Canada for a better-paying job in London as a doctor to elite society; similarly, Lom's much-younger wife (Lisa Gastoni, here in her international phase prior to the actress' "Euro-Cult" heyday) is being pursued by Carlo Justini, a former beau and Lom's own two-faced (in more ways than one) lieutenant. Actually, Justini is the middleman between the hired killers and their employers but their plans go repeatedly awry because Stevens has to contend with boorish Crawford's penchant for partying and disgraced medico Arne's bundle of nerves and the palpable enmity between these two!

The exciting climax sees Todd (ostensibly acting as lookout but actually romancing Drake) taking on the gun-toting Crawford in the hospital back-stairs and the convalescing and depressed (over his wife's suspected infidelity) Lom facing-off personally with Stevens – who had previously only acted as telephone diversion to Lom's attending nurse – in his room (via a gun ingeniously-hidden within the unlikeliest and most innocuous-looking of personal belongings on his bed-side table!); in the ensuing commotion, both Todd and a Canadian Mountie guarding the reception area are wounded.
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7/10
Cinematographer Jack Cardiff's Directorial Debut
blanche-231 January 2012
Jack Cardiff does a good job in his directorial debut, 1958's Intent to Kill, starring Richard Todd, Herbert Lom, Betsy Drake, Warren Stevens, and Lisa Gastoni. Lom plays a South American leader who has entered a Canadian hospital under the name of Martin; however, that doesn't stop a group of assassins, headed by Warren Stevens, from getting the details of his stay and trying to assassinate him. The goal is to have the doctor in their gang inject him with an air bubble. It doesn't quite work out as they hoped.

Richard Todd plays his doctor, Dr. McLaurin, an unhappily married man who is in love (platonically for the moment) with a nurse, Nancy Ferguson (Betsy Drake).

Though this is a British film, it's set in a hospital in Canada, and is reminiscent of the film Crisis, which starred Cary Grant. The acting is good, particularly from Lom, and the camera work, no surprise, is interesting.

The best scenes in this film, in my opinion, occur at the end, when there is a confrontation on a staircase, an intense and exciting scene, very well done.

Entertaining with some nice twists and good elements.
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7/10
We're being paid to do the job, if the job is done by someone else we don't get paid!
sol-kay25 May 2007
Warning: Spoilers
***SPOILERS*** Nice little sleeper of a crime/suspense movie set in cold and snowy Montreal Canada that has to do with the head of an unnamed South American country being secretly slipped into Montreal General Hosptal to have a life saving and very delicate brain operation. This after getting medical treatment back home, after an assassination attempt on his life, that didn't detect a massive blood clot on his brain that can eventually kill him.

Jaun Medna known as both the peoples and peasants champion back home is given the name of Martin to hide his identity as he's admitted into Montreal General for emergency brain surgery. Unknown to him and the hospital staff the opposition party who hate Menda's guts are planning to do him in before he's ever operated on.

Getting this trio of Canadian hit-men to do the job for them, at $50,000.00 apiece, those opposed to Menda staying alive have his top lieutenant Francisco Flores keying them in on his boss', Juan Menda, whereabouts in and out of the hospital and relaying that information to the head of the hit squad Finch and his two associates Karl and Boyd. Francisco, who considers himself to be a great Latin lover, who besides wanting Menda out off the way for being against the ruling class back home is also very much interested in his beautiful and spoiled wife Carla. Francisco want's to start up a hot and heavy relationship with her which he wouldn't have dared to do with Menda being alive and in control of the country.

The movie "Intent to Kill" also has a double plot to it that has nothing to do with Menda's health and those who want to make him very unhealthy, or dead with his doctor at the hospital Dr. Bob McLaurin having trouble with his wife Margaret. Margaret wants him to quit his job and move back to London England where he can be a doctor to the rich and famous in preforming cosmetic surgery and make three times as much money as he does in Montreal General. Margaret threatening to expose her husbands affair with his fellow surgeon Dr. Nancy Furgerson has Bob losing his concentration and almost causes him to mess up his patient Juan Menda during the brain operation he preformed on him. That caused Bob to almost do the job that the opponents of Menda paid Finch and his hit-men to do.

Menda recovering from his operation, that was deemed to be a complete success, is uncomfortable with his wife Carla not getting in touch with him. He smells a rat in both her and his top aid Francisco either playing around behind his back or working together with his enemies to do him in. Being the pragmatic and street wise politician that Menda is he's more then proved right, or at least half right, by the time the movie ends.

The hit men who are out to knock off Menda are stymied when he correctly insists to be moved into another room, seeing that the room that he's staying at has a fire-escape. The killers end up killing the wrong man Hardy, who's also one of Doctor Bob's patients suffering from a slipped disc.

Hardy's death, the first man to die in Montreal General Hospital while being treated for a slipped disc, sets off alarms in Doctor Bob's head as he senses that he was mistaken for Menda. Doctor Bob then gets in touch with the Montreal police to send a man over, Sgt. O'Brien, to guard him day and night until he's put back on a plane to take him back home. But the hit-men team not wanting to leave empty handed, without their $150,000.00 for knocking Menda off, are now more then ever determined to finish their job that they were hired to do. In their haste they end up screwing themselves, not Menda, up.

Wild and unbelievable final with the three hit men Doctor Bob and about a half dozen Canadian Mounties having it out in a wild shoot-out in the hospital corridor that turns Montreal General into a free fire combat zone. With Boyd after knocking off his fellow hit-man Karl for screwing, like he always did, everything up. Byd is then tackled by a wounded Dr. Bob as they both crash out a hospital window with Boyd knocked unconscious and arrested by the police who came on the scene.

With chaos and confusion raging inside the hospital Finch impersonating a policeman finally manages to break into Menda's unguarded hospital room only to get the surprise of his life. It turned out that Menda was not at all that sedated and naive, to what Finch & Co. were planing to do to him, but was more then ready to face him man to man with a little toy that he secretly had with him to protect himself.
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7/10
Obvious parallels
bkoganbing1 January 2021
The parallels with the MGM film Crisis that starred Cary Grant and Jose Ferrer about a South American dictator having an operation are too obvious to ignore in reviewing Intent To Kill.

The big difference is that while Jose Ferrer had the operation done by a visiting Dr. Cary Grant in Intent To Kill, Herbert Lom comes up from South America and checks into a Montreal hospital to have the operation done by Dr. Richard Todd.

Unfortunately following him are a party of assassins led by American hit man Warren Stevens. They make a couple of tries at Lom.

Unlike Crisis where we go into the type of regime that Ferrer leads and Ferrer is one very thinly disguised portrait of Juan Peron, we never get into why Lom is disliked enough to have assassins trailing him. And for Stevens it's just another contract.

The climax is a real thriller with Todd and nurse Betsy Drake battling the killers. Jack Cardiff made his directorial debut here. We mostly associate Cardiff with bigger budget items and technicolor. But he handled this black and white noir film well indeed.

It would be good to see Intent To Kill and Crisi run back to back.
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7/10
first movie by Jack Cardiff
happytrigger-64-39051728 March 2019
A south american president arrives in Canada for brain surgery, but murderers plot the perfect crime. First movie directed by the great director of photography Jack Cardiff ("Under Capricorn", "Black Narcissus", "Pandora and the Flying Dutchman", "The Barefoot Contessa", "The Vikings", ...), "Intent to Kill" is competently directed with good casting but with nothing exceptional except the ending which is an explosive editing must see. The photography is rather realistic with full light (except in few scenes), far from Cardiff's masterpieces as a cinematographer.
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This is a sleeper!
francodomenico14 April 2003
Catch this one, if you can. The acting is not that good; but, there is some comic relief in the way th would-be assassins blunder everything! Also, Warren Stevens is a Great, great actor--and, I know he did a huge amount of work in TV, but what an underestimated actor!

It is an American production, and they employed a lot of Local Canadian extras---Poor idea--Canadians probably "can" act; but not in this one.

Keep an eye on Herbert Lom--Awesome! Carlo Giustini is a handsome Italian actor--but, again, not a very good actor, either.

It is a little dramatic with the "wife" routine--sort of a la soap opera--but, If you find see this movie--I know you will love it.
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7/10
Works a treat
Leofwine_draca13 January 2019
Warning: Spoilers
INTENT TO KILL is a hospital-set thriller with a plot way ahead of its time. It's a lean and economic little film which sees Richard Todd's surgeon performing brain surgery on Herbert Lom, the latter playing the leader of a South American country. Unfortunately three goonish killers, one of them played by Peter Arne, are present outside and just waiting to take down Lom. The film feels like a dry run for later hospital slashers like HALLOWEEN II or VISITING HOURS and is surprisingly exciting in parts, particularly during the thrilling climax. Okay, so the mid section gets a bit soppy and drawn out, but otherwise this works a treat.
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6/10
Entertaining Thriller
malcolmgsw5 March 2019
Richard Todd plays a surgeon called on to operate on President Lom whilst trying to keep a grip on his domestic affairs.His wife being played by Euro vision hostess Katie Boyle who shows why she retired from acting.The writers making it more exciting by avoiding the obvious so that Lom is only guarded by one detective,giving open season for the assassins.
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8/10
A neat little Canadian thriller...
planktonrules18 January 2017
"Intent to Kill" is a really good suspense film which was made in Canada and has a very international cast. It is set at a hospital and a South American president (Herbert Lom) is scheduled to have some delicate brain surgery. However, somebody wants him dead and they've recruited a group of gangsters to make sure he doesn't leave the hospital alive. They make one attempt...and end up killing the wrong patient! But they are a very persistent and bloodthirsty lot and they won't stop until he's dead or they're all dead instead.

The film works well because the writing was excellent and the director did a nice job of keeping the tension mounting. The ending, in particular, was very exciting and well worth the wait.
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10/10
Intentionally Great-Intent to Kill ****
edwagreen29 January 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Taut thriller where a South American dictator, who was nearly assassinated,comes to Canada to face surgery after having seizures. Of course, there is a plot within Canada to finish him off. The guys involved in the plot have been hired by those against the man, and they have an inability to get along with each other.

An interesting point in the film is the idea that the doctor, a very good Richard Todd, and the dictator, Herbert Lom, both are having marital difficulties. To add to the plot, the dictator's wife unknowingly is involved with an official from the embassy of their country who is involved in this new assassination plot.

Alexander Knox, who was so good and robbed of an Oscar 14 years before in the memorable "Wilson," co-stars in this film as a Dr. Gillespie type-only he is realistic and is willing to take advice and follow through.

The plot twists are excellent. Betsy Drake, who always seemed to mouth those lines with her throat, is great as the female doctor who Todd really loves. He is married to a status climbing woman who wants him to come to England where there is more money opportunities. He is a dedicated doctor who wants to stay where he is.

The ending shooting spree in the hospital is exciting under excellent direction of Jack Cardiff.
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8/10
Offbeat Crime Thriller set in Montreal
mackjay229 September 2023
Famous cinematographer Jack Cardiff directed this somewhat offbeat crime thriller and his visual flair is evident. Many shots are more than interesting, and the city of Montreal is used to advantage, filmed in what looks like the dead of winter. There's a feeling of urban bleakness, not unlike many Film Noirs shot in US or UK cities. This could qualify as a minor late-period Noir, with a plot revolving around a band of murderous types who intend to assassinate a South American president, in need of a brain operation, for political reasons. Concerned with safety, the man was moved to a Montreal hospital, but the thugs have followed him there, "intent" on carrying out their mission. The other side of the plot concerns the doctor who treats the South American, and his marital strife. That subplot works fine, thanks to the casting of Richard Todd, Betsy Drake, and a very good list of actors: Alexander Knox, Herbert Lom, Warren Stevens. The latter is particularly intimidating as boss of the murderous gang. The very slightly complicated plot involves some unexpected turns. It's all well directed by Cardiff, with a great climax. Unfortunately, this film is not easy to find in a decent print. It was shot in CinemaScope, but copies all seem to be pan & scan. Let's hope some day it will be restored.
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