The Ceremony (1963)
6/10
Unknown Spanish/US co-production shot in Spain and Morocco , being played/produced/directed by Laurence Harvey
7 May 2022
An obscure and thought-provoking film delivering an almost expressionistic and brooding approach to a twisted situation adequately performed by notorious players . Dealing with a bank robber (Laurence Harvey) who is condemned to death penalty for committing a murder during the failed robbery and about to be executed by firing squad . His brother (Robert Walker Jr , Robert Walker's son with whom bears a remarkable resemblance) comes up with a plan to break him out of prison--but on the condition that his brother's girlfriend (Sarah Miles)"date" him first. Shocking! . . . Savage! . . . Sensual! This is the Ceremony . Her innocence . . . Traded for her lover's life .The story of a man condemned . . . Of his brother who offered to save him for a price . . . His brother's woman!

The Ceremony (1963) displays a simple and plain plot about a convicted killer sentenced to prison , condemned to death and subsequently rescued by his brother who demands liaison with sister-in-law as reward . This is a real and striking drama, developing an intimate approach to the actors as physical as moral , making their expressions a vivid aspect of the drama . Being mostly shot in interior scenarios , and all the roles perform vital parts giving intense interpretations . The higlight of the movie is the cinematography by prestigious director of photography Oswald Morris . As well as evocative and appropriate production design by designer Ramiro Gómez , filmed on various locations in Tangier, Morocco , and La Mancha , Toledo , Sevilla , Andalucía, Spain . Stars Laurence Harvey giving a nice acting , as usual , and he produces and directs , as well . Being very well supported by a great cast with plenty of important British/American actors , such as : Ross Martin , Robert Walker Jr. , Lee Patterson , Jack MacGowran , Noel Purcell and being a Spaniard/American coproduction here appearing several Spanish actors , such as : Fernando Rey , Fernando Sancho, José Guardiola , Carlos Casaravilla , José Nieto , Xan Dan Bolas , José Luis Martin, Barta Barri , among others.

This mishmash was uneven but professionally directed by Laurence Harvey , and it failed at the international boxoffice . Laurence Harvey's film debut came in House of Darkness (1948), and he was soon signed by Associated British Studios. Harvey was cast as Romeo in "Romeo and Juliet" (1954) , a flick that exemplified the main problem that kept Harvey from major stardom , his screen persona was emotionally aloof if not downright attractive . Then , Harvey attracted enough attention in Hollywood to be brought over by Warner Bros. And given a main character in "King Richard and the Crusaders" (1954). After making three flops in a row, Harvey began a brief reign as the Jack the Lad of British cinema with the great success of "Room at the top" (1958). That film and "Looking back in anger" (1959), which was also released that year, inaugurated the "kitchen sink" school of British cinema that revolutionized the country's film industry and continuing in Hollywood, in the 1960s. In this Hollywood interlude, Harvey also appeared in the screen adaptations of Tennessee Williams' "Summer and Smoke" (1961) opposite the great Geraldine Page, Oscar-nominated for her role, and the artistically less successful "Walk of the wild side" (1962), supported by the legendary Barbara Stanwyck . His next and last decade of Harvey's screen life -dying early at 45- was a disappointment, with the actor relegated to less and less prestigious pictures and international co-productions that needed a "star" name , such as : "Struggle for Rome" , "Night Watch" , "Yellow-Headed Summer" , "Welcome to Arrow Beach" , "The Deep" and "Rebus". And he directed some films with limited success, making the transition to director with this "The Ceremony" (1963) and finished directing "Sentence in aspic" (1968) after the death of original director Anthony Mann. Rating : 6/10 . Acceptable and passable but neither notable , not extraordinary .
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