WATCH YOUR FAVORITE
MOVIES & TV SERIES ONLINE
TRY FREE TRIAL
Home > Thriller >

Five Days

Watch Five Days For Free

Five Days

A man pays a hitman to kill him. Circumstances change and he tries to call off the hit but he has trouble getting the deal killed.

... more
Release : 1954
Rating : 6.1
Studio : Hammer Film Productions,  Lippert Films, 
Crew : Art Direction,  Camera Operator, 
Cast : Dane Clark Paul Carpenter Anthony Forwood Howard Marion-Crawford Arthur Young
Genre : Thriller Crime

Cast List

Related Movies

Crank
Crank

Crank   2006

Release Date: 
2006

Rating: 6.9

genres: 
Action  /  Thriller  /  Crime
Stars: 
Jason Statham  /  Amy Smart  /  Jose Pablo Cantillo
The Man with the Golden Gun
The Man with the Golden Gun

The Man with the Golden Gun   1974

Release Date: 
1974

Rating: 6.7

genres: 
Adventure  /  Action  /  Thriller
Stars: 
Roger Moore  /  Christopher Lee  /  Britt Ekland
Things to Do in Denver When You're Dead
Things to Do in Denver When You're Dead

Things to Do in Denver When You're Dead   1995

Release Date: 
1995

Rating: 6.7

genres: 
Drama  /  Crime
Wild at Heart
Wild at Heart

Wild at Heart   1990

Release Date: 
1990

Rating: 7.2

genres: 
Thriller  /  Crime  /  Romance
Stars: 
Nicolas Cage  /  Laura Dern  /  Willem Dafoe
Protection Detail
Protection Detail

Protection Detail   2022

Release Date: 
2022

Rating: 6.4

genres: 
Drama  /  Action  /  Crime
Stars: 
Boynton Paek  /  Michael Nosé  /  Thomas Nguyen
Hitman
Hitman

Hitman   2007

Release Date: 
2007

Rating: 6.2

genres: 
Drama  /  Action  /  Thriller
Stars: 
Timothy Olyphant  /  Dougray Scott  /  Olga Kurylenko
Double Tap
Double Tap

Double Tap   1997

Release Date: 
1997

Rating: 5.1

genres: 
Action  /  Thriller
Stars: 
Stephen Rea  /  Heather Locklear  /  Peter Greene
Mulholland Drive
Mulholland Drive

Mulholland Drive   2001

Release Date: 
2001

Rating: 7.9

genres: 
Drama  /  Thriller  /  Mystery
Stars: 
Naomi Watts  /  Laura Harring  /  Justin Theroux
The Contract
The Contract

The Contract   2006

Release Date: 
2006

Rating: 5.6

genres: 
Drama  /  Action  /  Thriller
Stars: 
Morgan Freeman  /  John Cusack  /  Alice Krige
Get Carter
Get Carter

Get Carter   1971

Release Date: 
1971

Rating: 7.3

genres: 
Thriller  /  Crime
Stars: 
Michael Caine  /  Ian Hendry  /  Britt Ekland
Collateral
Collateral

Collateral   2004

Release Date: 
2004

Rating: 7.5

genres: 
Drama  /  Thriller  /  Crime
Stars: 
Tom Cruise  /  Jamie Foxx  /  Jada Pinkett Smith
Eraser
Eraser

Eraser   1996

Release Date: 
1996

Rating: 6.2

genres: 
Drama  /  Action  /  Thriller

Reviews

Evengyny
2018/08/30

Thanks for the memories!

More
Grimerlana
2018/08/30

Plenty to Like, Plenty to Dislike

More
PodBill
2018/08/30

Just what I expected

More
Humaira Grant
2018/08/30

It’s not bad or unwatchable but despite the amplitude of the spectacle, the end result is underwhelming.

More
jamesraeburn2003
2018/01/31

James Neville (Dane Clark), the MD of Amalgamated Industries, is double crossed on a business deal by the archaeologist Cyrus McGowan (Howard Marion Crawford) leaving his firm on the brink of bankruptcy. He arranges to have himself killed so that his wife Andrea (Thea Gregory) can claim his substantial life insurance. He blackmails his friend Paul Kirby (Paul Carpenter) into committing the crime over a murder he undertook some years ago. Neville testified at his trial that it was self defence and was acquitted as a result, but the deceased's widow has since sent him some letters proving that it was actually murder one. Neville has put them into a sealed envelope with instructions that they are to be delivered to the police should he still be alive within forty eight hours. Naturally, he has arranged what should be a watertight alibi for his would be assassin. However, in a strange twist of fate, McGowan announces that their deal is back on and Neville is now faced with the dilemma of finding his killer before he can kill him. The trouble is, he has vanished. Aided by his loyal secretary, Joan Peterson (Cecile Chevreau), who is madly in love with him, he sets out to find Kirby. Several attempts are made on Neville's life before he visits his girlfriend at a Soho pub where she works and he learns that he has skipped the country as a result of getting cold feet over their contract. So who is using the contract for their own ends and who else could have known about it?...A British crime noir with a fanciful yet undeniably ingenious plot. On the downside, you will not have too much trouble in working out who Dane Clark's would be assassin is, but this is a very rewarding entertainment nonetheless. It quite convincingly recreates the style and atmosphere of American film noir thanks to the solid and sympathetic direction of Montgomery Tully, the excellent b/w camerawork of veteran Walter Harvey and strong performances from the leads - especially Dane Clark.* Caution - very large spoilers in the next paragraph.* He plays his part with a real depth of feeling alternating between ruthless brutality in the way he blackmails and bullies his friend into committing his own murder and his loving devotion towards his wife. Despite being a workaholic and letting his high powered job take him over, which means he seldom ever gets time to spend with her, he worships the ground she treads on and, so it seems, vice versa. She sticks with him through thick and thin and the reason Neville devised his elaborate plot was so that he could leave her well provided for and spare her the damage of the scandal and embarrassment that would have surely resulted had the company gone under as a result of him. When he finally finds out that his beloved wife has betrayed him and has a new lover in the form of one of his business partners Peter Glanville (Anthony Forwood) who both plot to kill him using his own contract he refuses to believe it. In the climatic shoot out in which Andrea is accidentally shot dead, he looks down at her and is deeply devastated. He gently picks up her body off of the floor and carries her back into the house saying "I mustn't leave her here, its dark, its not right" suggesting that he will still miss her and love her deeply in spite of everything. Cecile Chevreau is quite good as Joan, although her stern, bossy and schoolteachery character risks becoming off putting, and the look of envy and despair on her face as Neville picks up his wife's body and lovingly caressing it as he takes it indoors is priceless. Indeed, as the film ends we are invited to think that Joan probably did get her man, and that in the best film noir tradition, probably lived a disastrous relationship since she would have been overshadowed by Andrea even though she is dead. Room for a sequel? No, the fact that it is left for the audience to ponder the futures of the main protagonists is more fun and adds to the film's overall impact. Thea Gregory also offers a fine performance as Clark's wife and makes the perfect femme fatale.All in all, the film succeeds as an atmospheric and diverting triangle of love, deceit, treachery and murder that comes off a whole lot better than I was expecting it to. I am a follower of veteran British 'B' picture director Montgomery Tully's work and this, I think, stands as one of his better offerings. It makes us regret that after his 'A' film career faltered in the late forties that he would remain within the quota quickie industry for the remainder of his career. This is actually an early Hammer film (made in their Exclusive days) and, from the films from this era of their history that I have been able to see, it seemed they tried for quality even when making b-pics and more often than not got it.

More
JohnHowardReid
2017/10/16

On the same VCI "Hammer Film Noir" disc as "The Glass Tomb", is "Paid To Kill" (1954). This film, also known as "Five Days", is another unlikely venture for the credited Montgomery Tully. It is also excitingly photographed (for around half its length anyway) in true noir style by Jimmy Harvey. This one doesn't have the same all-pervasive noir mood of "The Glass Tomb", but mostly reserves these effects for the action scenes. On the other hand, the premise, whilst somewhat outlandish, is a rather suspenseful one, even though those of us who are used to the twists and turns of the average whodunit, will probably guess the solution. Nonetheless, the acting is solid, especially from delightfully seedy Paul Carpenter in one of his best roles ever as the "friend in need", and from Thea Gregory as the glamorous wife. Dane Clark walks through his role as the distracted company director with his usual assurance, while Howard Marion Crawford has a ball as an eccentric Egyptologist. Newspaperman, film critic and novelist Paul Tabori wrote the suspenseful story and screenplay.

More
dougdoepke
2015/03/28

Looks like budget-minded Lippert productions got more bang for their buck in England than in the US. This is a well-produced crime drama, with a tight script and some good touches. Nevill's (Clark) a not very likable business bigshot, (note that he treats his board of directors with uncalled for abruptness). Trouble is his latest big deal is failing, so, in desperation, he arranges his own death. That way his wife Andrea can collect insurance and be taken care of. His plan is to hire associate Paul to do the job. But surprise, the business deal suddenly goes through and Nevill's vindicated. Now he's got to stop Paul from carrying out his part. Nonetheless, it appears that Paul's gone away. Yet, surprise, somebody really is trying to kill Nevill. But if it's not Paul, who is it and why.Clark delivers an exemplary performance. Notice his subtle facial expressions to fit the mood. There're some good touches, like the suspenseful father in the park or the colorfully blustery Hyson, neither of which affects the plot but does add atmosphere. And catch that very last shot, suggesting that Nevill's obsession is not yet spent, despite the attempts to kill him, while poor Joan comes trailing after. It also suggests a sneaky subtext that might otherwise go unnoticed amid the murder plots. To me, the movie's much better than expected for a Lippert production. The movie's got mystery, suspense, and atmosphere, plus Clark's motivated turn. So catch it if you can.

More
MARIO GAUCI
2007/10/11

I'd always been interested in catching some of the films from Hammer's pre-horror boom; so far, the only title I'd come across was PHANTOM SHIP (1935) which was made a couple of decades before the studio reached its peak period but which, presciently, starred one of the era's horror icons – Bela Lugosi.Anyway, Hammer apparently made a whole slew of ultra low-budget noirs featuring either faded American stars or second-tier leading men. This one, then, happened to be shown on late-night Italian TV and, knowing it's been released on DVD by VCI, I made it a point to check it out. It turned out to be a decidedly modest but not unpleasing little film: the star in this case is Dane Clark (not exactly top rank, you see) and, as I lay watching, felt that he wasn't really noir material – an opinion which, incidentally, I would change the very next day when I saw this same actor in the superior French-made GUNMAN IN THE STREETS (1950)! The plot, though far-fetched, is engaging: Clark's business fails and, in order to provide for his wife, proposes to have himself killed so that she can collect on his insurance; soon after, his fortune unexpectedly turns and he desperately seeks to stop his killer from carrying out the assigned task! Even if I watched the film dubbed in Italian, the London settings and character types offer a whole different atmosphere to the American noirs – the same thing goes for the French locations of GUNMAN IN THE STREETS – and this does help keep one's mind off the measly production values. The denouement provides a few surprises – Clark's wife emerges a villainess (which allows him free rein with the devoted secretary who had really loved him all along), the attempts on his life turn out not to have been done by the person he paid expressly for that purpose – which elevates the whole slightly than would otherwise have been the case. Besides, the film is short enough at 75 minutes not to overstay its welcome or allow the proceedings to slip into tedium. By the way, the original British title of this one is FIVE DAYS (the period of time over which events take place) but got changed to the more evocative PAID TO KILL for the U.S.

More
Watch Instant, Get Started Now Watch Instant, Get Started Now