Status
Released
original language
English
Budget
$ 0
Revenue
$ 0

John Harris

Dr Brown

Pat Harris

Hart Jacobs

Mr Harris Sr

Mrs Gordon

John's Counsel

Clyde

Counsel for the Crown

Mr Gordon

Judge

Harvard

Mapleton

Teddy's Father

Teddy's Mother

Sergeant Finley

Duty Sister

Marshall

Vicar

Teddy

Ruth

Newspaper Photographer

Custody Sergeant

Barrister

Court Clerk

Jury Foreman

Curate

Written by Geronimo1967 on 2022-06-22
Michael Craig turns in a strong, emotional, performance in this thought provoking drama. He takes his young daughter and her friend from next door on a trip to the seaside. They get into some difficulties and though he ("Harris") manages to rescue both children, it is soon clear that his hospitalised daughter "Ruth" will need a blood transfusion if she is to survive. The doctor "Brown" (Patrick McGoohan) assumes that consent will be readily forthcoming from the father and his wife "Pat" (Janet Munro) but when he discovers that they have religious convictions that will not permit this intervention, a tragedy looms large - and is promptly delivered upon the family. The doctor seeks a prosecution as he felt the father was criminally negligent in the care of his child, and what now ensues is a delicately balanced analysis - played out in a courtroom - of the relative merits of his case and that of the doctor, and of the position the "law" might reasonably take. What would you do, if it were your child? That's the obvious question and Munro is excellent as the emotional and conflicted mother and wife, with Messrs. Craig and McGoohan performing sensitively too, polarising family and community attitudes and posing questions about the value of life, choice and religious freedoms in a fashion that does give us a conclusion, but one tinged with guilt and regret. It is still a subject dealt with in courts around the world 50 years later, and does make you think.