The Violent Enemy
The Violent Enemy | |
---|---|
Directed by | Don Sharp |
Produced by | Wilfred Eades |
Written by | Edmund Ward |
Based on | novel by Jack Higgins |
Starring |
Tom Bell Susan Hampshire Ed Begley Noel Purcell |
Music by | John Scott (as Patrick John Scott) |
Cinematography | Alan Hume |
Edited by | Thom Noble |
Release dates | 1968 |
Running time | 94 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Budget | ₤250,000[1] |
The Violent Enemy is a film about an IRA plot to blow up a British power station.[2]
It was originally known as Come the Hero and filming began in Waterford in October 1968.[1]
Plot
IRA bomb expert Sean Rogan escapes from prison, and is reluctantly recruited into a scheme to blow up a British electronics factory back in Ireland.
Cast
- Tom Bell - Sean Rogan
- Susan Hampshire - Hannah Costello
- Ed Begley - Colum O'More
- Noel Purcell - John Michael Leary
- Jon Laurimore - Austin
- Michael Standing - Fletcher
- Philip O'Flynn - Inspector Sullivan
Critical reception
Sky Movies described it as, "one of only a handful of British films to deal with the troubles in Ireland. Played as a melodrama, the film is efficiently directed by action specialist Don Sharp. Tom Bell has the right air of disillusionment about him as the IRA man who's learned moderation in a British jail"; [3] and the Radio Times noted, "it's efficiently made, if unsurprising, and familiar American actor Ed Begley is worth watching as the fanatical Irish mastermind behind the scheme." [4]
References
- 1 2 Filming starts in Waterford. Was shot in Ardmore Studios, Bray, Co. Wicklow and on location in Enniscorthy, Co. Wexford. The Irish Times (1921-Current File) [Dublin, Ireland] 12 Oct 1968: 8.
- ↑ The Violent Enemy at BFI
- ↑ "The Violent Enemy".
- ↑ John Gammon. "The Violent Enemy". RadioTimes.