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One Jump Ahead (film)

One Jump Ahead
"One Jump Ahead" (1955).jpg
Directed by Charles Saunders
Produced by Guido Coen
Written by Doreen Montgomery
Based on One Jump Ahead (novel)
by Robert H. Chapman
Starring
Music by Edwin Astley (uncredited)
Cinematography Brendan J. Stafford
Edited by Margery Saunders
Production
company
Kenilworth Film Productions
Distributed by General Film Distributors (UK)
Release date
March 1955 (UK)
Running time
66 mins
Country United Kingdom
Language English

One Jump Ahead is a 1955 British crime film directed by Charles Saunders and starring Paul Carpenter, Diane Hart, Jill Adams and Freddie Mills. The film was based on a novel by American crime novelist Robert H. Chapman. The screenplay concerns a journalist who helps police track down the killer of a female blackmailer.The title refers to the reporter's attempts to keep "one jump ahead" of the police in solving the crime.

Reporter Paul Banner, an American "noozeman", works at the Daily Comet in England. When a young boy witnesses a murder, the killer mistakingly tracks down the boy's friend and kills who he thinks is the only witness to the crime. Banner becomes interested in the murders but complications arise when Judy (Jill Adams), his ex-love becomes involved.

Banner sets out to find the killer, and has the help of Maxine (Diane Hart), another reporter who vies for his attention. Together, they ferret out who the mystery killer is, keeping "one jump ahead" of the police.

Director Charles Saunders also made Behind the Headlines (1956), the second of three crime thrillers based on the works of American novelist Robert Chapman. In 1958, he also directed Murder Reported. All three films had many similarities; the stories all revolved around a news reporter investigating a murder, each lead role played by Paul Carpenter, with different supporting casts. Saunders specialized in the B movie at the Kenilworth Films Production house which turned out 11 mainly crime thrillers between 1948 and 1956.

TV Guide gave One Jump Ahead two out of five stars and wrote, "... occasionally witty dialog enhances this B-bracket programmer." In a recent review, SkyChannel TV noted, "Not at all bad for a British co-feature of its time, with some good crackles of humour in the dialogue and a lively tempo. Ex-boxing champion Freddie Mills appears in one of several roles he played in British films of the 50s."


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