| Anne Crawford | ... | Teri Mortimer | |
| Donald Stewart | ... | Charles Mortimer | |
| Renee Houston | ... | Lady Margaret | |
| Oliver Wakefield | ... | Baron Redburn | |
| Charles Heslop | ... | Dilfallow | |
| William Hartnell | ... | Joseph (as Bill Hartnell) | |
| Felix Aylmer | ... | President | |
| Charles Victor | ... | Dan | |
| Joss Ambler | ... | Police Chief | |
| Paul Sheridan | ... | Luis | |
| Jeremy Hawk | ... | Pierre | |
| Julian Somers | ... | Andre | |
| Rosamund Greenwood | ... | Miss Geach | |
| Billy Holland | ... | First Detective Inspector | |
| Noel Dainton | ... | Second Detective Inspector | |
| Leo de Pokorny | ... | Receptionist |
Directed by | |||
| Walter Forde | |||
Writing credits(in alphabetical order) | ||
| Ladislas Fodor | play (as Laszlo Fodor) | |
| Gordon Wellesley | writer | |
| Brock Williams | writer | |
Produced by | |||
| Max Milner | .... | producer | |
Original Music by | |||
| Jack Beaver | |||
Cinematography by | |||
| Basil Emmott | |||
Film Editing by | |||
| Terence Fisher | |||
Art Direction by | |||
| Norman G. Arnold | |||
Costume Design by | |||
| Norman Hartnell | |||
Production Management | |||
| Harold Richmond | .... | production manager | |
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director | |||
| Percy Hermes | .... | assistant director (uncredited) | |
Sound Department | |||
| Ernest A. Royls | .... | sound supervisor | |
| Cecil Thornton | .... | sound recordist | |
Special Effects by | |||
| George Blackwell | .... | special effects | |
Camera and Electrical Department | |||
| Gus Drisse | .... | camera operator | |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
| Escape from New York | Stormy Trails | The Spider Returns | Dangers of the Canadian Mounted | Minority Report |
|
IMDb User Rating:
|
IMDb User Rating:
|
IMDb User Rating:
|
IMDb User Rating:
|
IMDb User Rating:
|
| Full cast and crew | Company credits | IMDb USA section |
| Add this title to MyMovies |
Kudos to writers Gordon Wellesley and Brock Williams for supplying director Walter Forde with an unusually good comic screenplay. Yes, that's right -- I liked it. It reminded me of the Mozartean comic operas that go round and round in circles like a dog chasing its tail. After awhile you simply can't keep up with the implications of each of the plot's many twists and turns. But that's the verdict of the lazy spoon-fed audiences of today. The sharper audiences of Mozart's time had no trouble keeping up. What a refreshing bit of fun it was! The suave robber (in this case played scintillatingly by Oliver Wakefield) may be the cliché of clichés, but it's always a good time. The married woman (Anne Crawford) who gets caught up in the intrigue and displays second thoughts about her husband (the character goes back at least as far as Mrs. Ford in Shakespeare's "Merry Wives of Windsor") is here bestowed a decently delicious amount of ambiguity. Only the husband (Donald Stewart) seems a bit wooden. And the second tier characters are also as masterfully drawn as many in Shakespeare.
There are more famous Hollywood comedies of this type that get far more attention and aren't half as good as this little gem. My humble suggestion: Sit back and enjoy it!