New York City private detective Steve Martin is hired for protection by Wexler, a wealthy German living in Cape Town. After Wexler's butler is murdered and an assassination attempt is made on Martin and Wexler's secretary Helga, Martin discovers a photograph of four people, including Wexler and his butler, that indicates that all those in the picture are marked for death and there will be five victims.
The New York Times praised "fine views of Cape Town" but thought the film was not "necessary".[5]
The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "The basic narrative is one of the classic old-style murder thrillers of the kind perfected by Edgar Wallace and Philip Macdonald, and is efficiently worked out. Most of the acting is unremarkable, but what undoubtedly heightens the film's interest is the large variety of South African locations, often spectacular, and well integrated into the story."[6]
References
^p. 237 Armes, Roy Dictionary of African Filmmakers Indiana University Press (July 11, 2008)
^"Victim Five". British Film Institute Collections Search. Retrieved 14 February 2024.