Innocent Meeting (1959) Poster

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5/10
Middle class girl meets working class criminal. They fall in love
detectivedancing10 January 2009
saw this film as a B movie sometime in the 1960s alongside a more well known film. It opens with a nice posh middle class girl in a record shop buying a classical record where she meets a leather jacketed working class boy who is buying pop music. It ends on a roof with him with a gun having committed a criminal offence and she is pleading with him to give himself up to the police. I thought when i saw it it it had been retitled as innocent encounter.Its a love affair between a middle class girl and a working class boy, which was seen as unusual back in 1958
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6/10
Juvenile delinquent drama in 1950s Britain
howardmorley18 May 2017
Juvenile delinquency was a growing social problem in Britain in the 1950s.As the country got back on its feet after WW11, teenagers suddenly found more money in their pockets as jobs were plentiful in the post war economy.This drama features Sean Lynch who plays a working class orphan but artistically talented teenager who meets a nice middle class girl in a record shop and protects her from some bully boys when she wants to buy a long playing record of Tchaikovsky's music instead of the fashionable beat records favoured by the local youths.Beth Rogan plays the girl who gradually falls in love with the character played by Sean Lynch.She has a liberal father (Raymond Huntley) who owns a fabric factory and is predisposed to give Sean a job as an artistic designer in his fabrics department.One day the father loses his wallet with £50 in it and suspicion falls on Sean who is accused as he already has a police record and he loses his coveted job.Things then go from bad to worse and he returns to his old illegal haunts with the delinquent crowd with which he formerly mixed.

I would guess "Innocent Meeting" was a "B" feature which in British cinemas in the 1950s could be expected before "The Big Feature".I noticed Robert Dorning character actor who played in several "Hancock's Half Hour" comic TV episodes back then, and who here played a reporter hoping for a scoop.With a limited budget the film was adequate and I saw it today for the first time and I rated it 6/10.
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5/10
Full of clivhes,well it's a Danziger film
malcolmgsw23 March 2020
Well a Danziger film is hardly likely to be original and this is true to form.The main problem with this film is Sean Lynch.He is supposed to be a young tearaway from Hammersmith but sounds as if he had just stepped out of drama school.Raymond Huntley as a sympathetic potential father n law is hardly typecasting.Anyway it passes an hour painlessly.
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4/10
Nothing Special
boblipton18 May 2018
Sean Lynch is on probation, assigned to Ian Fleming, when he meets Beth Rogan in a music shop. Soon, they are getting on like a house on fire and she gets him a job as a design apprentice in her father's fabric factory. When his wallet turns up missing, however, he's accused and let go and winds up holding off the police with a gun.

This second feature is full of well-meaning intentions about the need to give youngsters a chance lest they tread an evil path, but it falls too quickly into melodramatic claptrap, abetted by a score that uses Tschaikovsky as its major theme. Alas, Mr. Lynch offers a sullen, almost whiny performance, Miss Rogan is a perky nullity, Mr. Fleming is well meaning but droning and ineffectual.... and makes the message of the film look futile. Nicholas Roeg is the camera operator for Jimmy Wilson as the cinematographer, and together they don't offer anything more interesting than shots lifted from 1930s crime dramas. Like far too many of the Danziger Brothers' productions, it takes what had worked in the past, offers it anew and results in a something utterly forgettable.
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