Coming a few years after Charles Bronson's movie star making hit Death Wish. St Ives is a change of pace film for a middle aged star who made his career shooting up lots of movie bad guys. Bronson somewhat improbably plays a writer who gets involved with a shady businessman (crook?) who uses Bronson to get back some ledgers that will incriminate him to the police. The businessman is played by of all people John Houseman. Houseman's associates are played by Jacqueline Bisset in the femme fatale role and Maximillian Schell.
One thing leads to another and a simple exchange of money for the ledgers leads to lots of murders and double crosses. Bronson is the smooth thinking and talking courier trying to figure things out. Actually Bronson who doesn't waste a lot of people for a change does a good job playing the writer. The director J. Lee Thompson whose best days were behind him does a competent job putting the film together and the cinematographer Carroll Ballard was an old Hollywood professional who gave the film a nice noir look to it.St. Ives has a good cast,besides the already mention leads. Character actors, Harris Yulin, Harry Guardino, Dana Elcar and everyone's favorite 1940's actor Elisha Cook Jr. show up. Bronson had been kicking around Hollywood since 1951 as a character actor himself. By this time in his career all that experience had made him a very good film actor.
The mystery itself is no great shakes, it's the typical mix of obscure clues, lots of dead bodies and the usual withholding of information to the viewer until the very end making it essentially impossible to solve until Bronson explains everything. Not a great film or a great mystery, however with this cast it's worth a look
The film was written by Barry Beckerman, the running time is 94 minutes.
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