Stolen Face is a 1952 British film directed by Terence Fisher and starring Paul Henreid, Lizabeth Scott and André Morell.
[1] The screenplay was by Martin Berkeley and Richard Landau based on a story by Alexander Paal and Steven Vas.
Lady Harringay arrives in her chauffeur-driven Rolls-Royce at the offices of her plastic surgeon, Dr. Philip Ritter, in central London.
Ritter drives with a friend to Holloway Prison and interviews Lily Conover, a female convict whose face is badly scarred.
The film was shot at Hammersmith's Riverside Studios with sets designed by art director Wilfred Arnold.
";[2] Boxoffice wrote: "What started out as an admirably original and highly engrossing idea to background a dual-role performance was virtually ruined through mallet-handed scripting and direction, resulting in over-dramatic delineations and situations.
"[3] Leslie Halliwell reviewed the film as: "Quickie melodrama which proved fairly popular because of its Hollywood stars.