Stop Me Before I Kill!

1960

Action / Drama / Horror / Mystery / Thriller

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Director

Top cast

Diane Cilento Photo
Diane Cilento as Denise Colby
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
896.86 MB
1280*544
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 48 min
P/S 2 / 1
1.72 GB
1920*816
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 48 min
P/S 1 / 1

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by blanche-26 / 10

unrealized potential but still interesting

"Stop Me Before I Kill" or "The Full Treatment" is a 1960 film with a screenplay by Val Guest, who also directed.

The story concerns a famous race car driver, Alan Colby (Ronald Lewis),who was involved in a terrible car crash with his wife Denise (Diane Cilento). He is unable to race, and he and Denise go to the south of France on vacation.

Alan goes through swift mood shifts - the slightest word can set off his temper. And he keeps being tempted to strangle his wife - in fact, he nearly does a couple of times.

This, of course, is where one has to suspend belief because why the heck would she stay with someone who has attempted to strangle her and whose temper flares at the drop of a hat? I understand women in abusive situations, but I don't know, my husband trying to kill me takes it to a new level.

A psychiatrist they meet, Dr. David Prade (Claude Dauphin) offers to help. Alan is hesitant, but once back in London, where Prade has also returned, he agrees. At the end of the treatment, he feels that he is cured. He is able to get back on the racing track and has no temptation to hurt Denise.

Right before he is to leave for a race, Alan wakes up and finds that Denise is not there. In fact, all the evidence points to the fact that she has been murdered.

This was a very good story that suffered from an unbalanced script. The film went on too long, and the psychiatric scenes were endless. Diane Cilento is a beautiful and heartfelt Denise, Claude Dauphin is likable, and Ronald Lewis for me lacked subtlety in a difficult role. A good-looking man, in the beginning of the film, he reminded me of David Hasselhoff; fortunately, the resemblance faded somewhat.

Sadly Ronald Lewis committed suicide in 1982, bankrupt and his career in the doldrums.

In other hands and a bigger budget, this could have been an excellent film. However it's worth seeing for the story.

Reviewed by bkoganbing3 / 10

Up pops the psychiatrist

Stop Me Before I Kill has Ronald Lewis cast as a racing car driver just getting over serious head injuries that had him in a coma. For whatever reason he's got all kinds of thoughts in his head about strangling his beautiful wife Diane Cilento. As another reviewer pointed out her accent kind of changes from French to Italian as if she was trying for some kind of middle romance language ground. I think mastered the American accent quite well later on in Hombre. But that was a much better picture.

As they are on holiday in France up pops psychiatrist Claude Dauphin who lives with his mother Francoise Rosay. He follows them back to London when they leave. Right there that should have told anyone, even someone with homicidal fantasies that this guy has some issues.

I found it interesting several other reviewers while pointing out a lot of the flaws Stop Me Before I Kill still said they enjoyed the film. I found the whole thing hard to fathom with some characters I thought made no sense at all.

This one was not the best work for any of the cast.

Reviewed by SnoopyStyle5 / 10

no kill

After a devastating car accident, race car driver Alan Colby becomes obsessed with strangling his wife Denise. She is concerned about his mental instability. They go to Cote D'Azur to rest where she is befriended by psychiatrist Dr. David Prade but Alan refuses to get treatment.

The title is also called "Stop Me Before I Kill!" That shows its B-movie level. The acting has limitation as well as Diane Cilento's odd accent. It keeps suggesting some tension but it could never rise above a low simmer. The movie has few thrills. The other problem is that the couple's chemistry is always troubled and the audience has no rooting interest to keep them together. Alan is extremely melodramatic and Denise has her accent overacting. The evil Prade is the movie's saving grace but it's still only talk. The material has some higher potential but this is no more than a B-movie.

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