Rag Doll (film)

Rag Doll, released in the USA as Young, Willing and Eager, is a 1961 British second feature[1] crime film, directed by Lance Comfort and starring Christina Gregg, Kenneth Griffith, Jess Conrad and Hermione Baddeley.[2]

Rag Doll
Directed byLance Comfort
Written byDerry Quinn
Brock Williams
Produced byTom Blakeley
StarringChristina Gregg
Hermione Baddeley
Kenneth Griffith
Jess Conrad
CinematographyBasil Emmott
Music byMartin Slavin
Distributed byButcher's Film Service
Release date
  • 1961 (1961)
Running time
67 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

Plot

Seventeen-year-old Carol flees her small-town home to escape from her alcoholic stepfather, and heads off to London where she is drawn to the sleazy excitement of Soho and finds work in a coffee bar. Carol is soon receiving advances from her boss, Mort Wilson, who, though older, professes to be in love with her. Meanwhile she falls in love with handsome young would-be nightclub singer Joe Shane and soon they are a couple. She discovers that Joe is a small-time crook on the side, with a gang background and a line in burglary.

When Carol becomes pregnant, Joe decides to do one last job to make the money to take them to a fresh start in Canada. He burgles Mort's house but Mort catches him in the act. After shooting Mort dead, Joe, himself severely wounded, goes on the run with Carol in a stolen car. They crash in a country lane and carry on by foot. The next morning, pursued by the police, Joe collapses in a field and dies from his injuries.

Cast

Soundtrack

Jess Conrad sings "Why Am I Living?" (composers: Abbe Gail, Martin Slavin), released in 1961 as a 7" single (Decca 45-F.11348).[3]

Critical reception

The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "This meandering picture tells a nickelodeon story against London night life backgrounds, wastes no time on things like conviction and characterisation, but achieves nothing compensatory either. Jess Conrad, incidentally, sings 'Why Am I Living?' "[4]

Chibnall and McFarlane in The British 'B' Film write that the film is an "unremarkable morality tale about how the big city nearly ruins a provincial girl, but Basil Emmott's camera gives an authentic touch of drab ordinariness to the roadhouse she quits, of urban danger to the city she innocently samples, and imbues the pastoral setting of the final chase with an undertow of shabbiness."[1]: 441 

Legacy

The film gained a new audience in the 2000s in response to Conrad's elevation to cult status as a purveyor of late-1950s and early-1960s pre-Beatles British kitsch, and received a Region 2 DVD release in 2009 in a double bill with Comfort's 1962 film The Painted Smile.[citation needed]

References


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