An unspeakable crime among officers and ladies.
Director: Michael Anderson
Writer: Barry England, Robert Enders
Producer: Michael Deeley, Andrew Donally, Barry Spikings
A company of British soldiers in colonial India is shaken when the widow of their most honored hero is assaulted. A young officer must defend a fellow lieutenant from the charges in an unusual court-martial, while investigating the deepening mystery behind the attack.
107 min
Rating: 6.2/10
Released
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Top Cast

Michael York
Tenente Arthur Drake

Richard Attenborough
Maggiore Lionel E. Roach

Trevor Howard
Colonnello Benjamin Strang

Stacy Keach
Capitano Archer

Christopher Plummer
Maggiore Alastair Wimbourne

Susannah York
Marjorie Scarlett
Movie Info
Director: Michael Anderson
Writer: Barry England, Robert Enders
Producer: Michael Deeley, Andrew Donally, Barry Spikings
Production Companies: Crown, Lion International
Countries: United Kingdom
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User Reviews
What Others Said
CinemaSerf:
Despite the pretty stellar cast list, I struggled a bit with this rather dreary story. It centres around James Faulkner's "Lt. Millington" who is being court-martialled in British India for a serious assault on the widow of a fallen colleague - "Mrs. Scarlett" (Susannah York). He is to be defended by the inexperienced "Drake" (Michael York) before a committee chaired by the openly hostile "Capt. Harper" (Stacey Keach). On the face of it, he is doomed - but some tenacious investigative work from his counsel gradually gets to the bottom of what happened. The ending is more of a sort of guess which of the other famous actors - Trevor Howard, Richard Attenborough or perhaps Christopher Plummer might have done it given we are pretty safe to assume that poor old "Millington" is being stitched up. Sadly, this moves at a glacial pace with none of the characters offering much by way of depth or interest. Colourful? Yes, that's true - and the costumes and settings all look great, but like so many of these latter-day tales of Empire, it is all faintly ridiculous and swings clumsily at the supposed honour of the "regiment" at all costs in quite a shallow fashion. I found the direction was much more suitable for a theatrical delivery, too. Disappointing.