Victim | Telescope Film
Victim

Victim

Critic Rating

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Melville is a closeted lawyer living in 1960s London when his idyllic existence is interrupted by a blackmailer threatening to reveal his secret. But he refuses to give in, instead risking it all to bring the culprit to justice in this drama that had the British Board of Film Censors seething.

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What are critics saying?

100

RogerEbert.com by Roger Ebert

The movie proceeds on two levels, as a crime thriller and as a character study, and it's this dual nature that makes it an entertainment at the same time it works as a message picture.

100

The Guardian by Peter Bradshaw

This gripping thriller, part of the BFI's Bogarde retrospective, daringly smashed through 1961's homosexual taboos, but has weathered best as a study of blackmail and paranoia.

91

Entertainment Weekly

While some may be put off by talk of ”abnormalities,” the inner struggle depicted so poignantly in Victim has not dated at all.

91

Entertainment Weekly by Tim Purtell

While some may be put off by talk of ”abnormalities,” the inner struggle depicted so poignantly in Victim has not dated at all.

90

Variety

This is telling, moving stuff.

90

Variety by Staff (Not Credited)

This is telling, moving stuff.

80

Time Out

A brave British melodrama from 1961, one of this country's first explorations of gay life on screen.

80

Time

Victim has a neat plot, deft direction by Basil Dearden, and the sort of grum good manners one expects of the British in these trying situations. It also has a careful performance by Bogarde, and it pursues with eloquence and conviction the case against an antiquated statute.

80

TV Guide Magazine

A liberal film on the subject of homosexuality rather than the radical film some considered it at the time, Victim still stands as an intelligent film attempting to address an important social issue.

80

TV Guide Magazine by Staff (Not Credited)

A liberal film on the subject of homosexuality rather than the radical film some considered it at the time, Victim still stands as an intelligent film attempting to address an important social issue.

80

Time Out by Staff (Not Credited)

A brave British melodrama from 1961, one of this country's first explorations of gay life on screen.

80

Time by Staff (Not Credited)

Victim has a neat plot, deft direction by Basil Dearden, and the sort of grum good manners one expects of the British in these trying situations. It also has a careful performance by Bogarde, and it pursues with eloquence and conviction the case against an antiquated statute.

75

Chicago Reader by J.R. Jones

Victim, for all its compromises, offers a rich mosaic of minor characters, none of them particularly complex but each articulating some British attitude toward homosexuality and the law surrounding it.

70

The New Yorker by Pauline Kael

Ingenious, moralistic, and moderately amusing.

70

The New York Times by Bosley Crowther

As a straight piece of blackmail melodrama, it is a good bit below the British par. But as a frank and deliberate exposition of the well-known presence and plight of the tacit homosexual in modern society it is certainly unprecedented and intellectually bold.