This was a very important film for me, it got me into terrible trouble with Fleet Street…
Mike Hodges, BFI 2022.
Wikipedia might well have Mike Hodges making his feature film debut with the colossal Get Carter (1971) but here he is a year earlier making not one but two interesting feature length efforts for ITV Playhouse which hinted at the themes and the edginess his masterwork would soon contain. ITV Playhouse was an anthology series that ran from 1967 to 1983 and featured original ideas from the likes of Dennis Potter as well as Hodges who was working mainly in television production at the time as he moved into direction. He’d already tried one screenplay for Armchair Theatre and Suspect (1969) then Rumour (1970), made for Thames Television, helped launch Euston Films who would produce The Sweeney, Minder and many more.
In a 2021 interview with the BFI, the director said The Rumour had been instrumental in getting him the directing job for Get Carter having impressed not just that film’s producer, Michael Klinger, but also another ground-breaking filmmaker:
It was experimental filmmaking, in many ways, by the standards at the time… Malcolm McDowell was working with Stanley Kubrick, and Stanley saw it and came in the next morning when they were shooting… Clockwork Orange. He said to Malcolm that he’d just seen this film and he was very impressed by it… You have to be rather arrogant to think like this, but Malcolm told me that Stanley really thought it was a great film.
It's true that The Rumour has an edge that is more cinematic than its TV origins and, not knowing of its background, I was surprised when an ad-break popped up. Hodges camera is tight to the action and holding his protagonist firmly centre stage even through the passers-by at Euston Station, his car windscreen, foliage and other ambient foreground materials. It creates the impression of Hunter at the heart of the story but also pushing himself forward no matter the risks… this is his journalistic instinct being revived and his time to face the music after too long in his discomfort zone the Fleet Street hack he’d probably always feared he would become.
The character is propelled through the film in the same irresistible way as Carter on his quest, and as cynical tabloid showbiz journo Sam Hunter (Michael Coles) starts the film speaking into his Dictaphone as he drives his pink 1950 Cadillac Fleetwood 75 Imperial Sedan towards the Blackwall Tunnel. This image is repeated over and over throughout the film driving us onwards until we eventually catch up with the full sequence and its significance is revealed. It’s a clever device and chilling in its way.
After this opening we see the Cadillac coming across the raised section at the A40 – the Westway Marylebone Flyover - then turn off the Marylebone Road down to Euston – via Camden (sadly there’s no Reel Streets breakdown at this stage!) – where he is due for a 2:00 PM meeting. All of this is soundtracked by the Moody Blues singing The Best Way to Travel from the album In Search of the Lost Chord (1968) … yesterday’s psychedelia already yellowing and curled up like so much tabloid pages with Hunter’s trade taking his readers on a magical mystery tour every day.
And you can fly
High as a kite if you want to
Faster than light if you want to
Speeding through the universe
Thinking is the best way to travel…
In Euston, he’s watched by two shifty looking men as he goes to the John Menzies in the central part of the concourse and glances at the sports headlines on the back pages of the Evening Standard where news is to be found of Alloway Lad winning the Brighton Cup – John Hayward riding the horse to success on 9th August 1969. The front page announces that there’s “a serious crime every 25 seconds…” “Broken Britain” eh? We already have the Raymond Chandler vibe and the sense that there are plans already in motion.
A young woman enters the station at dead-on time, Liza
Curtis (Vivienne Chandler) and, as she and Sam sit down for a drink one of the
men takes photographs, the black and white images clicking into view, another
story in the making. She reveals that she is, as they used to say, a high-class
call girl and that there are photographs of her and an MP, Julian Crawford (Jim
Delaney), as well as others in compromising positions, which are being used to
blackmail Crawford is being blackmailed. She wants out and to sell her story to
Hunter’s paper, as king for £50,000 which, he splutters, they wouldn’t pay her
even if she was the virgin Mary.
Probably your kind of journalism isn’t worth
censoring, try writing the truth about something worthwhile Mr Hunter! You may
get a surprise.
Next up for Sam is a reception for a new book launch, The
Great Conspiracy from Pulitzer Prize winner Professor Arthur Kook (David
Cargill) at Madame Tussaud’s. An inebriated Sam dismisses the “phoney American instant
intellectuals” and his thesis which he hasn’t even read but is soon put in his
place after accusing the Professor’s “research” as a means to make money.
After getting a call to visit Liza urgently, Sam arrives
at her Mayfair flat where, once again the two men in black are outside as events
are soundtracked by Bach’s Toccata in Fugue. Inside the flat Sam finds Liza has
been suffocated in plastic with the radio blurting out Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell
in counterpoint to the horror in front of him. He takes her notebook and the
key to a Euston safety deposit box and makes good his escape. His next stop is
the premier of The Battle of Britain (released on 15th September for
those keeping track of the filming sequence…) in which we again here his glib
Fleet Street copy for the event… again counterpoint, as the connection between
his reality at that point and the world-weary ligger couldn’t be bigger. He
phones the police anonymously.
Awaken by a call about the murder at 4:00AM, Sam feigns
ignorance as he’s told that she died of an overdose… clearly this was not the
case, something is not adding up despite his headline “Call Girl Suicide Shock”.
He sneaks into the apartment but gets thrown out by the police who reiterate
the cause of death, although he spots the name tag that he had found on the
corpse.
I tell you what, rumours hurt people… a lethal weapon,
unfortunately Fleet Street thrive on it.
There’s further suspicion when, having collected the
photographs from Euston, Sam tries to get his editor Mike Weston (James
Donnelly) interested but the possibility of organised and influential opposition
makes him wary. Sam gets agreement to follow up on leads and heads off to
interview the deceased’s mother… It’s probably no coincidence that Mike’s an
Aussie and that he gets complained about later by one of the old guard, as a
certain Rupert Murdoch had just acquired the News of the World, followed
closely by The Sun.
As my car slithered to a halt outside the peeling door, urchins and children crowded round me asking for money. This is Gangland. Here the notorious Kray brothers operated. Here Diana Webb, alias Lisa Curtis grew up. Here I found her 46-year-old mother… I approached the door and was fearful of the tragic story it would open up to me…”
Hodges punctuates the film with Hunter’s composing his copy on his Dictaphone and the disconnection between his words and the actually shows not only the dubious art of the gutter journalist but also the sad realities that it feeds off, no more so when he goes to visit the dead woman’s mother who he skilfully manipulates to find out as much information as possible. The total absence of any “street urchins” when his car pulls up is one of the film’s most telling moments. Hunter is telling tales but he’s also moving back to being a journalist and has found a story that needs uncovering.
He goes to Liza’s old workplaces, a strip joint run by
old flame Betty Jacobs (Joyce Blair) and then a hostess bar where he “interviews”
Sally (Clovissa Newcombe) a friend of hers and we get to see an artiste
performing (Jill Chartell billed as a belly dancer). The men in black follow
him each step of the way as do the police who break into his flat and, as he
calls Mike to help, we see that his boss is sleeping with his wife Anne (Colette
O'Neil). There are so many twists and turns, the pace is breathless and you’re
constantly trying to second guess as we work with Sam as he runs headlong into
the heart of the issue.
Is he just being manipulated through, have the people who hired the shadowy men picked the right target to propagate the “rumours” they want? Will Hunter get to the real truth and, will he or the story survive the attentions of the men in black? Hodges offers us tantalising hope at the end, a valediction of the role a free press can play in holding powerful men to account… and uncertain ending though and the doubts persist to this day: how can press rumour be made reality?
In a 2021 interview with Samira Ahmed at the BFI, Hodges talked about The Rumour was partly influenced by the treatment of Stephen Ward during the Profumo Crisis and how the establishment covers its tracks and manipulates. Working on World in Action, Hodges had encountered the showbiz reporters and saw a lot of sleazy work, “… most of it lies – none of it has changed, nothing’s changed… – I just wanted to make a film about it.”
Dusty Verdict: I can see why Kubrick was impressed with Hodges’ film and the director’s very deliberate and high content approach to crafting this hard-hitting and yet unorthodox narrative. There so much craft in Hodges script and direction: he doesn’t run head on at his targets and leaves it for the audience to decide on the moral weight of the characters. Sam Hunter is a hard character to sympathise with and yet we end up rooting for him all the same as he battles against the dishonesty of his own trade.
Michael Coles gives a superb performance and is in virtually every shot, the narrative wound taught round his character like a noose. The only question is, can he write his way out of it?
And now the erm thoughts of Chairman Sam. As I speed through the City with its monolithic Victorian buildings towering above me, I wondered if the rich and illustrious bankers and merchants who inhabit these parts ever pause in the relentless business of making money ever pause and think of the sad, sordid poverty-stricken areas on their doorsteps?
You can find both The Rumour and Suspect on the Network DVD set, Euston Films Presents Armchair Cinema which includes lots of other goodies. It’s out of print but copies are still to be found on eBay and elsewhere.
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