There Ain't No Justice

There Ain't No Justice is a 1939 British sports drama film directed by Pen Tennyson and starring Jimmy Hanley, Edward Chapman and Edward Rigby. The film is based on the 1937 novel of the same name by James Curtis.

There Ain't No Justice
Directed byPen Tennyson
Written byNovel & screenplay:
James Curtis
Sergei Nolbandov
Pen Tennyson
Produced byMichael Balcon
StarringJimmy Hanley
Edward Chapman
Edward Rigby
Michael Wilding
CinematographyMutz Greenbaum
Edited byRay Pitt
Music byErnest Irving
Production
company
Distributed byABFD
Release date
  • June 1939 (1939-06)
Running time
83 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Budget£19,883[1]

Plot summary

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Tommy Mutch (Jimmy Hanley) is a garage mechanic and small-time boxer. With his family in financial difficulty he needs to find money in a hurry. As luck would have it he meets boxing manager Sammy Sanders (Edward Chapman). Sammy assures Tommy he can get him lucrative main event bouts.

Tommy is promoted as the next boxing star which is reinforced with a series of convincing wins. However, Tommy discovers that the bouts were fixed by a gambling syndicate. He realises now that he has been set up by his manager and is expected to take a fall.

He has little choice but to go-ahead but needs to come up with a plan. One that will guarantee a financial return for his family while also hitting the syndicates in the pocket.

Cast

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Production

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James Curtis adapted his own novel, There Ain't No Justice to provide the screenplay for the film. He had done so the year before for one of his own novels, They Drive By Night, for the film of the same name. As with that adaptation he found himself having to remove areas of dialogue and story that would not get by the censors of the time. Many of these would be depictions of graphic violence against men rather than the sexual nature of his previous novel.[2]

This was the first film directed by Pen Tennyson, who had served as Assistant Director to Alfred Hitchcock from 1934. He would go on to direct two further films before being killed during World War II.[3]

The film features an uncredited role by real life boxer Bombardier Billy Wells,[4] best remembered as one of the gongmen featured in the Rank Organisation films logo. [5]

Release and reception

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It was released theatrically in the UK with the slogan "Real people, Real problems, a human document". Due in part to its distinctive realistic portrayal of the boxing world it became a critical success.[6] However, the author Graham Greene, having praised the previous year's James Curtis adaptation (They Drive by Night), was not convinced. He considered the film to be timid and too refined in its depiction of the subject matter.[7]

It is available on DVD in the UK on Volume Eight of Network's Ealing Studios Rarities Collection. It is often shown at film revivals in both the US and UK and was shown in May 2010 as part of BFI Southbank's "Capital Tales" season.[8] It was also shown on the London Live television channel on Sunday 13th Sept 2015.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Chapman, Llewella. "'The highest salary ever paid to a human being': Creating a Database of Film Costs from the Bank of England". Journal of British cinema and television, 2022-10. Vol. 19, no. 4. Edinburgh University Press. p. 470-494 at 480.
  2. ^ There Ain't No Justice, Lost London Literature
  3. ^ Pen Tennyson Profile at BFI Screenonline
  4. ^ Billy Wells at IMDB
  5. ^ Film world mourns man who banged the (paper) gong for Rank, The Independent
  6. ^ The history of British film: 1929:1939, Rachael Low, p. 254
  7. ^ Pen Tennyson Profile at BFI Screenonline
  8. ^ There Ain't No Justice, BFI "Capital Tales"
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