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Four in the Morning Poster

Four in the Morning

1965 | 94m | English

(307 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 0.9 (history)

Director: Anthony Simmons
Writer: Anthony Simmons
Staring:
Details

The parallel stories of two couples in crises and their connections to a drowned woman found in a river.
Release Date: Dec 16, 1965
Director: Anthony Simmons
Writer: Anthony Simmons
Genres:
Keywords morgue, woman drowned, marital discord, kitchen sink realism, unhappy love, feeling trapped
Production Companies West One Film Productions
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Jan 19, 2026
Entered: May 04, 2024
Starring

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Full Credits

Name Character
Ann Lynn Girl
Judi Dench Wife ("Judi")
Norman Rodway Husband ("Norman")
Brian Phelan Boy
Joe Melia Friend ("Joe")
Name Job
Anthony Simmons Story, Director, Screenplay
Pat Moon Continuity
Benny Royston Makeup Artist
Josephine Mackay Script Consultant
Bernard Sarron Art Direction
Walter Storey Sound Editor
John Barry Conductor, Original Music Composer
Larry Pizer Director of Photography
David Tringham Production Manager
David Bracknell Production Manager
John Wakefield Assistant Director
Neville Smallwood Makeup Artist
Nicholas Napier-Bell Assistant Editor
Tana Sayers Script Consultant
Ted Ball Sound Recordist
Fergus McDonell Editor
Roy Baird Production Manager
Anthony Waye Production Manager
Name Title
Roy Simpson Associate Producer
John Morris Producer
Organization Category Person
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Reviews

Geronimo1967
6.0

This is a film that I felt really belonged on the stage. It centres around a married couple with a baby and a courting couple. The former - Norman Rodway and Judi Dench are unhappy. She is fed up with being stuck at home all the time with their teething child while he continues to live as if he were ... a bachelor. The latter - Ann Lynn and Brian Phelan are enjoying the mutual discovery process whilst uncertain as to what the future might bring, if anything at all, to their relationship. Meantime, we know that the police have pulled the body of a young woman from the river Thames. Who might she be? Might she be connected with one of our quartet? Now on the plus side, Judi Dench does deliver convincingly as the frustrated woman struggling with early motherhood whilst her man is off galavanting, and there is also a calming John Barry score to help things along. Aside from that and a few scenes of intensity, though, the rest of this rather meanders along showing us people who are neither interesting nor likeable and there is a surfeit of fairly pointless dialogue that presumes, riskily, that the audience might actually care whether they get/stay together or not. That’s where the theatre might have helped it. The closed confines of a more rigid stage might have intensified the potency of the messages - for messages there are, but here these are very much of the sexual stereotype fashion that fall into rather than break any moulds in British film-making. It’s an almost documentary style observation of their lives that at times breathes vigorously but for the most part it just drags. Sorry.

Jun 09, 2025