'Dial M for Murder' (1954)

Limited edition giclee printed on photo rag 308 gsm fine art paper

crime film-noir thriller


'Dial M for Murder' (1954) - film-art
'Dial M for Murder' (1954) - film-art
'Dial M for Murder' (1954) - film-art
'Dial M for Murder' (1954) - film-art
'Dial M for Murder' (1954) - film-art
'Dial M for Murder' (1954) - film-art
'Dial M for Murder' (1954) - film-art
'Dial M for Murder' (1954) - film-art
'Dial M for Murder' (1954) - film-art
'Dial M for Murder' (1954) - film-art
'Dial M for Murder' (1954) - film-art
'Dial M for Murder' (1954) - film-art
'Dial M for Murder' (1954) - film-art
'Dial M for Murder' (1954) - film-art
'Dial M for Murder' (1954) - film-art
'Dial M for Murder' (1954) - film-art
'Dial M for Murder' (1954) - film-art
'Dial M for Murder' (1954) - film-art
'Dial M for Murder' (1954) - film-art
'Dial M for Murder' (1954) - film-art
'Dial M for Murder' (1954) - film-art

Regular price £139.00 Sale

Please select a size and framing option

Preview Matinee Feature Blockbuster Premiere
Unframed Black White Oak



Notes on sizing

All measurements given are for the printed image only. To calculate the overall dimensions of a framed print please add 200mm to both the horizontal and vertical measurements.

Example: A print image that is specified as being 825mm x 351m will sit inside a frame that has the approximate outside dimensions of 1025mm x 551mm.

'Dial M for Murder' (1954)

Limited edition giclee printed on photo rag 308 gsm fine art paper

Director: Alfred Hitchcock

Writers : Frederick Knott, Frederick Knott

Stars : Ray Milland, Grace Kelly, Robert Cummings

In London, wealthy Margot Mary Wendice had a brief love affair with the American writer Mark Halliday while her husband and professional tennis player Tony Wendice was on a tennis tour. Tony quits playing to dedicate to his wife and finds a regular job. She decides to give him a second chance for their marriage. When Mark arrives from America to visit the couple, Margot tells him that she had destroyed all his letters but one that was stolen. Subsequently she was blackmailed, but she had never retrieved the stolen letter. Tony arrives home, claims that he needs to work and asks Margot to go with Mark to the theater. Meanwhile Tony calls Captain Lesgate (aka Charles Alexander Swann who studied with him at college) and blackmails him to murder his wife, so that he can inherit her fortune. But there is no perfect crime, and things do not work as planned.