Development F.L. Green's novel, also used as the basis of the 1969
Sidney Poitier film
The Lost Man, was published in 1945. It followed upon wartime action by the
IRA in Belfast, in consequence of which
Northern Ireland undertook its first and only execution of an
Irish Republican, 19-year-old
Tom Williams. In the novel, an IRA plot goes horribly wrong when its leader, Johnny Murtah, kills an innocent man, and he is gravely wounded. The source of Green's familiarity with the Belfast IRA at the time is thought to be the Belfast writer
Denis Ireland. Ireland's anti-
Partition Ulster Union Club had been infiltrated by the IRA intelligence officer and recruiter
John Graham.
Casting According to Richard Burton, the lead role was originally offered to
Stewart Granger. Burton wrote in his diaries: Reminds me of Jimmy Granger being sent the script of Odd Man Out by Carol Reed and flipping through the pages where he had dialogue, deciding that the part wasn't long enough. He didn't notice the stage directions so turned it down and James Mason played it instead and made a career out of it. It's probably the best thing that Mason has ever done and certainly the best film he's ever been in while poor Granger has never been in a good classic film at all. Or, as far as I remember, in a good film of any kind. You could after all have a 'James Mason Festival' but you couldn't have a 'Stewart Granger' one. Except as a joke. Granger tells the story ruefully against himself. Aside from Mason, the supporting cast was drawn largely from Dublin's
Abbey Theatre. Among the other members of the Organisation are
Cyril Cusack,
Robert Beatty, and
Dan O'Herlihy. On his travels, Johnny meets an opportunistic bird-fancier played by
F. J. McCormick, a drunken artist played by
Robert Newton, a barman (
William Hartnell) and a failed surgeon (
Elwyn Brook-Jones).
Denis O'Dea is the inspector on Johnny's trail, and
Kathleen Ryan, in her first feature film, plays the woman who loves Johnny. Also notable are
W. G. Fay—a founder of the Abbey Theatre—as the kindly Father Tom,
Fay Compton,
Joseph Tomelty, and
Eddie Byrne.
Albert Sharpe plays a bus conductor. A number of non-speaking parts were filled by actors who later achieved public attention, including
Dora Bryan,
Geoffrey Keen,
Noel Purcell,
Guy Rolfe and
Wilfrid Brambell (a standing passenger in the tram scene). Few of the main actors in the film actually manage an authentic
Ulster accent.
Filming The cinematographer was
Robert Krasker, in his first film for director Reed, lighting sets designed by
Ralph Brinton and
Roger Furse. Reed made extensive use of location filming, which was uncommon at the time. Exterior scenes were shot in West Belfast, The bar set was based on the
Crown Bar in Belfast but was a studio set built at
D&P Studios in
Denham, Buckinghamshire. The duplication was so authentic that tourists in subsequent years would visit the Crown Bar, thinking it was the bar in the film. To further enhance the realism of the film, Reed used real sounds instead of standard
sound effects, recording the "actual drum of mill machinery and the echo of hoof beats." The narrowness of Johnny's world is represented by scenes shot on location in small rooms and in alleys. The film went over budget and overschedule so although it was successful it hurt Reed's relationship with the Rank Organisation.
Music Composer
William Alwyn was involved writing the
leitmotif-based film score from the very beginning of the production. It was performed by the
London Symphony Orchestra and conducted by
Muir Mathieson. == Political context and censorship ==