• Source: The Eyes of Annie Jones
    • The Eyes of Annie Jones is a 1964 American-British drama film directed by Reginald Le Borg and starring Richard Conte, Francesca Annis and Joyce Carey. It was written by Louis Vittes. The film tells the story of a sleepwalking young woman involved with a murder.
      The 1978 movie The Eyes of Laura Mars was inspired by The Eyes of Annie Jones.


      Plot


      Taxi driver Tom Lucas murders wealthy Geraldine Wheeler, with whom he had been having an affair. The victim's Aunt Helen gets in touch with Geraldine's brother David and with Annie Jones, a 17-year-old girl from a nearby orphanage, who is said to have powers of extrasensory perception.
      It turns out David has been embezzling from the family and hired Lucas to do the killing. A sleepwalking Annie seems to be possessed by the dead woman's spirit, saying things like, "They won't let me rest." When she approaches a spot where the body is buried, David has to prevent Lucas from killing the girl.
      The two men have a falling out over money Lucas is still owed. The police become suspicious of him, and Lucas dies after crashing his speeding car. David is arrested, and the body and soul of Geraldine had not been allowed to rest, now found in the car's trunk.


      Cast


      Richard Conte as David Wheeler
      Francesca Annis as Annie Jones
      Joyce Carey as Aunt Helen
      Myrtle Reed as Carol Wheeler
      Shay Gorman as Tom Lucas
      Victor Brooks as Sergeant Henry
      Jean Lodge as Geraldine Wheeler
      Alan Haines as Constable Marlowe
      Mara Purcell as orphanage matron
      Mark Dignam as orphanage director
      Patricia McCarron as Miss Crossley
      Max Bacon as publican Hoskins
      Barbara Leake as Margaret


      Production


      A low-budget “B movie,” The Eyes of Annie Jones was filmed “quickly and cheaply” in England.
      The picture was among a number of 20th Century Fox “budget program” projects produced by Jack Parsons. Parsons was also responsible for director Terence Fisher’s 1964 The Earth Dies Screaming.
      Filming started in March 1963. It was shot in London. Robert L. Lippert tried to persuade Sophia Loren to play the lead.


      Release


      Film historian Wheeler W. Dixon notes that “the film opened briefly in the United States as supporting feature, and was soon shelved after its initial run.”


      Reception


      The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "Having cast aside conventional suspense by disclosing the secrets of its murder plot early on, this odd little detective thriller compensates with some rather good characterisation and, on the whole, rather good acting. Unfortunately the film is hamstrung throughout by uninspired direction which plods stolidly and unimaginatively on to the bitter end."
      Critic Howard Thompson at the New York Times declares that the film is “a bore from start to finish, consistently inept and transparent.” Thompson names the producer, director and the scriptwriter as the “creative culprits” in the endeavor, adding rhetorically “why did anybody make this picture?”


      Retrospective appraisal


      Dixon suggests that any merits that The Eyes of Annie Jones might possess have not appeared with age: “The film remains stage-bound in a drab apartment for most of its length, and finally emerges as a plodding police procedural.”
      Allowing that Richard Conte, as the “rackish embezzler” seeking his missing sister is “good,” Dixon disparages Francesca Anna’s acting as “flat, monotonous, and does little to enhance the film.” Dixon notes that director Reginald LeBorg did “not do as well as he might have with the material.”


      Notes




      References




      External links


      The Eyes of Annie Jones at IMDb
      The Eyes of Annie Jones at AllMovie
      The Eyes of Annie Jones at the TCM Movie Database
      Review of film at New York Times

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