Convicts Dodger Lane (Peter Sellers), Lennie Price (Bernard Cribbins) and Jelly Knight (David Lodge), aided and abetted by crooked clergyman Soapy Stevens (Wilfrid Hyde-White), escape from prison in a Black Mariah, pull off a diamond heist and nip back into the prison for the perfect alibi. The liberal governor (Maurice Denham) of Huntleigh directs a lax prison regime but crime didn’t pay in those days – and when authoritarian warder Sidney Crout (Lionel Jeffries) arrives from Rockhampton he is determined to make life behind bars uncomfortable for Dodger, Lennie and Jelly. —Britmovie.co.uk
Robert Day (1922-) b. Sheen, England. An exciting British talent who sank deep into the trough of mediocre TV movies, Day was another cameraman who turned to direction. In the 1950s, the signs were all good. He achieved fine atmospheric effects amid believable high melodrama in three bloodcurdlers, and showed a nice, sense of crazy comedy in the gut-busting Two-Way Stretch (1960), the apogee of all Peter Sellers‘ British comedies. There was Tony Hancock‘s funniest comedy, The Rebel (1961) and also Tarzan the Magnificent (1960), the best Tarzan film since the 1930s. But television was already reaching out its tentacles. There were a few more Tarzan films, good at first then indifferent, in all senses, and the disastrous She (1965), in which Day seemed to have lost all his flair for atmosphere and chills – and in a Hammer film too! By this time he was making countless episodes of TV series, at first in Britain (Danger ManlSecret Agent) then America (The FBI, A Man Called Ironside, and… read more