- The League of Gentlemen (film)
Infobox Film
name = The League Of Gentlemen
image_size =
caption = DVD cover
director =Basil Dearden
producer =
writer = John Boland (novel)Bryan Forbes (screenplay)
narrator =
starring =Jack Hawkins Nigel Patrick Roger Livesey Bryan Forbes Richard Attenborough
music =
cinematography =
editing =
distributor =Allied Film Makers
released = 1960
runtime =
country = flagicon|UK UK
language = English
budget =
preceded_by =
followed_by =
website =
amg_id =
imdb_id = 0052997"The League Of Gentlemen" is a 1960 British
crime film , directed byBasil Dearden . It was based on the 1958 novel by John Boland, and was adapted byBryan Forbes (who also starred in it). The film was made throughAllied Film Makers in just two months and was distributed by theRank Organisation , premièring in 1960.It was one of the first English films to have all the elements of the successful 1950s U.S. heist films, although with a distinctly English tinge. Unlike many heist thrillers, this film is remarkably non-violent, and the robbery itself relies more on planning and thorough preparation than brute force. It was the most successful British film of the year.
A fully restored edition of the movie was released as a
Special Edition DVD in theUK in2006 . Extra features on the DVD included aSouth Bank Show documentary.ynopsis
It is night-time on an empty street. A manhole cover opens from below, and out climbs Lieutenant-Colonel Norman Hyde (
Jack Hawkins ) immaculately dressed in a dinner suit. He gets into a Rolls-Royce and sets off home. There he prepares various envelopes each containing a copy of an American crime paperback entitled "The Golden Fleece", one-half of a £5 note, and an invitation from "Co-operative Removals Limited" to a lunch at the Café Royal.These envelopes are posted to various men, former army officers each of whom is in desperate or humiliating circumstances. They all turn up at the Café Royal where, after lunch, Hyde dismisses the waiters and introduces himself (he was careful not to sign the letters). He then hands out the other halves of the £5 notes and asks for their opinion of the book. It tells the story of a robbery committed by a team of men who are experts in various ways. When no-one shows much enthusiasm over it, Hyde expresses surprise given their backgrounds: "You're all crooks, aren't you? Of one kind or another". Touring the table as he pours out the
brandy , he reveals why they were obliged to leave the army, their former ranks and specialist skills, which range from simple fighting to bomb-making andquartermaster ing. He also reveals their present occupations which are far from desirable:*
Major Peter Race (Nigel Patrick ), a former transport officer who resigned before the exposure of ablack market ring inHamburg . He makes a poor living through unlicensed gambling and stays over at theYMCA . He prides himself on his good breeding, but has the funny habit of even addressing men as "old darling";
*Major Rupert Rutland-Smith (Terence Alexander ), the hen-pecked husband of a wealthy young woman who delights in pulling his strings because he depends on her money. She also enjoys extramarital affairs to which he can only turn a blind eye;
*Captain "Padre" Mycroft (Roger Livesey ) who was dismissed for "gross indecency in a public place". He is now acon-man impersonating various religious types such asvicars andpriests . He also enjoys lewd books;
*Captain Martin Porthill (Bryan Forbes ) who was dishonourably discharged for killing suspected members of theCypriot EOKA terrorist organisation. He earns money as a piano player andgigolo ;
*Captain Stevens (Kieron Moore ), a one-time follower ofOswald Mosley he now runs a gym. Ahomosexual (at a time when such things were still illegal) he needs money to pay off ablackmail er;
*Captain Frank Weaver (Norman Bird ), a former member of abomb disposal squad, he tried to defuse a bomb while drunk. His mismanagement led to the deaths of four of his men and he has been ateetotaller ever since. He runs apawn shop with his ever-chatting wife and cumbersome father-in-law;
*Lieutenant Edward Lexy (Richard Attenborough ), a specialist in communications, he was dismissed for selling information to the Russians while inBerlin and now runs a struggling repair shop for radios andfruit machines , his main customer being his equality roguish father.Hyde then tells them he has no
criminal record himself, but has a grievance for being made redundant. He now intends to rob a bank using the collective skills of the team, with equal shares of £100,000 each "or more" (a very large sum in the late 1950s).He then leaves asking them to seriously consider his proposal. One of them, Race, follows Hyde home. Race is interested in the plan, but he warns Hyde that he might need someone to keep an eye on the others. Hyde agrees but insists that everyone gets an equal share of the loot since "the one sure way to disaster is for someone to get greedy". Over dinner Race finally agrees and with a smile announces that Hyde is "losing a friend, but gaining a second-in-command".
The gang then meets (under the guise of an amateur dramatic society rehearsing "
Journey's End ") to discuss the plan further (and are interrupted by a very campOliver Reed ) before they all move into Hyde's house, where he imposes a strict military regime under Queen's Regulations, with duties and fines (£100 or £500 deducted from the final haul) for misdemeanours.The first part of the operation involves a raid on an Army Training Camp in
Dorset for arms and supplies — the raid is perpetrated while Hyde, Mycroft, Porthill and Race distract the camp personnel by posing as senior officers conducting an unscheduled food inspection. The team uses Irish accents so that the IRA would be suspected. The gang then sets up a base in a rented warehouse to prepare their vehicles and equipment. In Hyde's basement they train and go through the details of the plan using maps and models. On the evening before the operation, Hyde destroys the plans and sighs; all this has brought him back to the days when he was actually part of military operations.Using
smoke bombs ,sub-machine guns andradio jamming equipment, they then carry out an elaborate and dramatic raid on aCity of London Bank near St Paul's — "Operation Golden Fleece" — with military precision. The raid is both successful and bloodless, and Hyde and his men escape with the loot.After the robbery, back at Hyde's house, there is tension as the celebrations are interrupted by the unexpected arrival of an old friend of Hyde's, Brigadier "Bunny" Warren (
Robert Coote ) who drunkenly recalls the old days. The team members depart one-by-one. Then the telephone rings and Hyde discovers that police and soldiers have surrounded the house. He is told the flaw in his plan: his own car. A passing police officer noted the number plate of his car at the rented warehouse, and a little boy playing outside the bank also noted the number as part of a hobby in collecting car registration numbers(not an unknown). The police also discovered that the number on the van in fact belonged to a private car inSouthampton .Hyde surrenders and is escorted to a Black Maria where he finds the rest of the team "all present and correct."
Cast
*
Jack Hawkins - Lieutenant-Colonel Norman Hyde
*Nigel Patrick - Major Peter Race
*Terence Alexander - Major Rupert Rutland-Smith
*Roger Livesey - Captain "Padre " Mycroft
*Bryan Forbes - Captain Martin Porthill
*Kieron Moore - Captain Stevens
*Norman Bird - Captain Frank Weaver
*Richard Attenborough - Lieutenant Edward Lexy
*Robert Coote -Brigadier "Bunny" Warren
*Nanette Newman - Elizabeth Rutland-Smith
*Doris Hare - Molly Weaver
*Gerald Harper - Captain Saunders
*Patrick Wymark - Wylie
* David Lodge - C.S.M.
*Norman Rossington -Staff Sergeant Hall
*Brian Murray - Private "Chunky" Grogan
*Nigel Green - Kissing Man
*Dinsdale Landen - Young man in gym
*Ronald Leigh-Hunt - Police Superintendent
*Oliver Reed - Chorus Boy col-endExternal links
* [http://members.aol.com/cinemabritain/league.html Analysis of the film]
*imdb title|id=0052997|title=The League of Gentlemen* Reviewed on the [http://mysteryfile.com/blog/?p=663 "Mystery*File"] blog.
* A discussion of The Post-War British Caper Film on the [http://mysteryfile.com/blog/?p=664 "Mystery*File"] blog by Tise Vahimagi.
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