Rotten Tomatoes® Score
100%
88%
In Theaters: August 1, 1961 (limited)
1h 40m | Drama
In its time, Victim was considered as a daring a film as had ever been made in England. Taken at face value, Janet Green and John McCormick's screenplay is nothing new: Dirk Bogarde plays a lawyer who agrees to defend an old friend (John McEnery) on a theft charge, only to be enmeshed in a blackmailing scheme.
What set this one apart is the fact that the lawyer had once been the male lover of his client. At a time when homosexuality was a criminal offense in England, any film that depicted the gay scene in a non-judgmental light was in for a rough time from the bluenose brigades.
What really startled filmgoers of 1962 is that the homosexuals shown in Victim were seemingly normal, everyday blokes, a far cry from the stereotyped nance characters common to films. Denied the MPAA seal when it was released to the United States, Victim surprisingly ran into very little interference when it was released to television in the mid-1960s.
Director: | Basil Dearden |
Producer(s): | Michael Relph |
Cast: | Sylvia Syms, Peter McEnery, Dirk Bogarde, Nigel Stock, Anthony Nicholls, Norman Bird, Dennis Price, Derren Nesbitt, Donald Churchill, Hilton Edwards |