Eight Witnesses (TV Movie 1954) Poster

(1954 TV Movie)

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5/10
Good Opening Sequence, Then Down To Work
boblipton27 February 2019
Charles Jacquemar has just gotten over the border from the East with some scientific papers that western intelligence wants to see. First he goes to see his daughter, Peggy Ann Garner. He thinks he is being pursued, and takes refuge in a reading room, where it turns out he is right; he is knifed in front of eight people.... all of whom are blind. When intelligence officer Dennis Price gets there, all that can be determined is the killer was a man who smoked cigars. The papers have disappeared. Can the good guys find them before the bad guys do?

The copy of this movie shot in Bavaria for television was a poor one, so any details of the camerawork were washed out, but the beginning was a good one, run largely silent, with palpable fear on Jacquemar's face. The story, doesn't have much call for elaboration beyond the beginning and the climax scene. The direction by Lawrence Huntington is not particularly interesting, but it gets the job done so efficiently that a three-minute epilogue had to be added to bring the run time up to an even hour.
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6/10
Eight Witnesses should get more focus
mzahidirshad19 October 2021
A Fairly good start for this spy thriller but later part was rather unimaginative and felt like Routine lines.... Eight Blind witnesses should get more focus imo.... Not Bad film if you are a fan of Classic Crime films from British Cinema....
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Not Bad, But Could Have Been Better
Snow Leopard16 May 2001
The spy/mystery movie "Eight Witnesses" is not bad as light entertainment, but it is based on an interesting plot idea that is never fully developed. It ends up being a fairly fast-paced but rather routine feature that could have been better.

The story starts with the murder of a scientist carrying important information, with only a group of blind persons as potential witnesses. It's an interesting premise, but after one scene in which the witnesses are questioned, it moves on to more routine material.

What follows is nothing exceptional, but it does move pretty quickly, and it is not very long. Dennis Price and Peggy Ann Garner, as the two leads, work all right together. If you like mysteries or spy stories, "Eight Witnesses" probably has just enough to be worth a look.
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2/10
How could they possibly make a spy film THIS dull?!
planktonrules5 August 2014
"Eight Witnesses" is a film in the public domain and after seeing how dull and cheap it was, I think I can understand why no one bothered to renew the copyright on this one! The film is a Cold War thriller about spies and communism (though oddly communism or the Soviets are NEVER mentioned). This stuff sure should have been tense and exciting...but it wasn't.

When the film begins, Dr. Ernst Hildebrandt has escaped from this captors behind the Iron Curtain. However, oddly, he hasn't yet turned up in the West. Eventually he does show--but only briefly to his daughter. Then, he quickly disappears and his body is found in a library. However, the witnesses to his murder are an odd lot--they are all blind. Using these witnesses, his strange daughter and intuition, an agent tries to piece events together. After all, the professor was supposed to be carrying important documents on him and they were not found on the body. And, the killers are apparently still looking for them. Eventually, the papers are recovered...but by then, you really don't care!

As I said, the film is very low energy (the actors NEVER seem emotional or real), dull, has uninteresting characters and has a musical score that is cheap and doesn't fit the movie. In fact, I'd swear it's recycled as often it his inappropriate crescendos and seemed a bit random and over-done. Additionally, Peggy Ann Gardner was a poor choice to play the daughter, as she was supposedly from the same country as her father had an American accent--yet his was very pronounced and sounded like he was from central Europe. How could you possibly make a spy movie involving a murder THIS dull?!
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2/10
There's deadly dull, and there's comatose dull. The later is worse.
mark.waltz2 March 2022
Warning: Spoilers
A poor European made TV movie stars Peggy Ann Garner as the daughter of scientist Charles Jacquemar who is stabbed to death among a group of eight blind people (with the British movie star Dennis Price as a detective), harassed over the presence of some secret documents his enemies believe that she has. They don't get anywhere by slapping her silly, and the audience might find themselves slapping themselves silly trying to wake up through all the tediousness of this hour long thriller without thrills.

This seems to have been filmed for TV rather than videotaped, but surviving prints are absolutely horrible. I can't find any reference to this being a part of any anthology show, so it's difficult to say how this ended up airing on American TV or just played somewhere in Europe on movie screens. The pacing is ridiculously slow, performances are weak and the direction is flaccid. It's probably one of the worst discoveries of the golden age of TV I've ever seen, and even the presence of the young Garner can't save it. There seems to be no motivations for any of the characters, so many elements of important details missing, and the photography and set direction is extremely claustrophobic. It's one of those shows that you look on out of Amazement how it could have elements of a cold war spy Thriller and end up losing you more frozen then the Siberian wasteland.
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8/10
Wrongly billed as a murder mystery, this is instead very good Cold War spy thriller with some nice twists in its routine plot
dbborroughs7 February 2006
The movie is sold with the premise that a murder occurs in front of eight witnesses but all of them are blind, however this is not really a murder mystery rather its an espionage thriller, and a damn good one at that.

The plot of this Cold War movie is that a scientist with knowledge of a secret formula escapes to the West from a "Soviet" lab. He calls a British agent for a pick up but before that can happen he is spooked by two men waiting to use a pay phone and runs off. He flees to where his daughter works, a library for the blind, however before she can go off with him, he is killed in front of several blind witnesses. The film film then becomes a quest to catch the killer and to recover some papers that he was carrying.

This is not a real murder mystery. We know who the killer is from the outset, the real question is who will get the papers that have been hidden in the library. Its a tense little movie that is unremarkable in most ways except that it is highly entertaining. You really do wonder what is going to happen to are hero (the British agent) and heroine (the scientist's daughter). Will the romance, begun by the agent as a means of keeping tabs on the girl, survive the strain of the chase? You probably know the answers already, but you'll still watch this all the way to the end to find out because the little twists of plot and German scenery make this something above the normal run of the mill.

I really liked this movie. It took a shop worn tale and dressed it up nicely and made itself into a small little guilty pleasure.

Definitely worth looking for, especially on the budget priced DVD that was just released.

8 out of 10.
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8/10
On the run for your life and almost getting all the way through
clanciai10 January 2022
There are some Hitchcock moments here that will stick in your mind. The murder sequence is a killer because of the long, meticulous foreplay that leads up to it, without you or the victim having the chance of getting any idea of the emergence of the murderer until it's too late. The victim is a sweet old man on the run with some state secrets, and of course he is concerned and slightly paranoid, being too well aware of the secrets he is carrying, while we never learn anything about it. Dennis Price, always elegant and eloquent, makes a good show together with Peggy Ann Garner, a librarian managing the hall of the blind readers, all reading braille. She is the daughter of the fugitive and is not involved in any way in her father's secrets, but gets harassed by his murderers anyway. It's a great thriller in a small format, but the high moments of psychological cinematography with astute sensitivity calls to mind not only Hitchcock but also Graham Greene.
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Spy thriller without the thrills
GManfred16 April 2011
"Eight Witnesses" is a misleading title, as the eight witnesses don't provide much help and are in only one scene in the picture. They are in the Braille room at a library in Vienna when a fugitive scientific genius pops in. The predictable happens, and thereby hangs an overrated tale.

The scientist was carrying an undisclosed document, which immediately goes missing and which the good guys and bad guys are looking for. And so, time is spent and time is filled to pad this semi-interesting film out to a presentable length. One of the few bright spots is suave Dennis Price, with his marvelous speaking voice, who is one of the good guys. Peggy Ann Garner is the daughter of the scientist but seems disinterested in the proceedings (must be catching, because I felt the same way).

This picture is not a 'must see' for any movie fan. I guess if a friend presents you with a copy you would have an excuse to watch it, but then you would have to question whether he knows what a good movie is.
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