poster

The Gentle Gunman (1952)

6.2 | Oct 23, 1952 (GB) | Thriller, Drama, Crime | 01:26

They Branded Him a Coward... and paid in full for their mistake.

The relationship between brothers Terry and Matt, both active in the IRA, comes under strain when Terry begins to question the use of violence.

Featured Crew

Director, Producer
Producer
Music, Original Music Composer
Director of Photography
Editor

Cast

profile
John Mills
Terence Sullivan
profile
Dirk Bogarde
Matt Sullivan
profile
Elizabeth Sellars
Maureen Fagan
profile
Barbara Mullen
Molly Fagan
profile
Joseph Tomelty
Dr Brannigan
profile
Gilbert Harding
Henry Truethome
profile
James Kenney
Johnny Fagan
profile
Liam Redmond
Connolly

Reviews

avatar
John Chard
6 | May 04, 2014
Ealing take on the Irish Troubles. Directed by Basil Dearden and adapted to screenplay from his own play by Roger MacDougal, The Gentle Gunman finds John Mills and Dirk Bogarde as brothers in the IRA circa 1941. Matt (Bogarde) is the young and hungry in the name of the cause brother, Terence (Mills) has grown tired of the violence and questions the IRA’s methods. This puts a strain on their relationship, whilst it also puts Terence on a collision course with the IRA superiors who brand him as a traitor. The Irish Troubles has never been an easy subject to broach in movies, the political stand point of the film makers invariably leaning towards bias. Whilst critics and reviewers have to battle with their own convictions when trying to stay firmly on the fence. The Gentle Gunman is an attempt at being an anti violence movie, one with a “gentle” pro British slant from that most British of film studios, Ealing. Unfortunately it’s tonally all over the place, awash with a mixed bunch of characters that range from apparent comic relief, to rabid Irish terrorists and a town crier like British bigot. Things are further put into the realm of the unbelievable by Mills and Bogarde trying to hold down Irish accents, a shame because without the fluctuation of the vocal chords the performances are rather good. It’s also a bit too stagey and the pace often drags itself into a stupor, making the adequate action scenes act more as a merciful release than anything truly exciting. On the plus side the film looks amazing at times, with Gordon Dines (The Blue Lamp) on cinematography dealing firmly in film noir filters. Which goes some way to explain how the film has come to be in a couple of reference books about British noir. But really it’s a marginal entry and all told it's just a routine drama from a Studio who were much better in other genre spheres. 6/10