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Synopsis

At times it’s a fast-moving thriller loosely based (mostly fictionalized) on the £ 3 million Great Train Robbery of the Royal Mail, a night mail train heading from Glasgow to London in 1963, and is much influenced in its penchant for detail by Rififi. Its success was the reason Yates went to Hollywood a year later to make his biggest hit Bullitt. It’s only routine cops and robbers doings, but excites with a jewel robbery and then a wild chase sequence through the London streets in its twenty minute sequence to open the caper film. – Dennis Schwartz

Director

Original

Peter Yates

Yates began staging plays in the British provinces at the age of 19 and worked as an assistant to J. Lee Thompson and Tony Richardson in the early 1960s. He then alternated between film and TV work and made his feature debut with “Summer Holiday” (1963). Yates’ early work exhibited a talent for fast-paced action, reflected in such films as “Bullitt” (1968), which included one of the most harrowing car chases ever filmed, and “The Friends of Eddie Coyle” (1973). In a change of pace, he directed the coming-of-age comedy-drama “Breaking Away” (1979). During the 1980s Yates crafted a number of fine, character-driven studies such as “The Dresser” (1983) with Tom Courtenay and Albert Finney, “Eleni” (1985) and “Suspect” (1987). In the 90s, he worked sporadically, helming “Roommates” with Peter Falk, and reuniting with Finney for the Irish drama “The Run of the Country” (both 1995). —TCM.com 

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