Status
Released
original language
English
Budget
$ 0
Revenue
$ 0

Felix H. Wilkinson

Nightingale

Rhona

Ford

Joe Kirby

Alec

Roy

Norman

Dicky

Arthur

Wally

Stan

Dusty

Bill

Terry

Clarry

Mr. Kirby

Mrs. Kirby

Dorrie Kirby

Jago

Det.-Sgt. Fothergill

B.B.C. Announcer

Dicky’s Mother

Vicar

Selwyn Pike

Watchman

Larry the Bull

Shorty

Boy (uncredited)

Schoolboy (uncredited)

Congregation Member (uncredited)

Written by Geronimo1967 on 2022-11-10
This is one of the lesser known Ealing comedies and it has something of the Children's Film Foundation output to it too, as the youngsters cotton on to a dastardly plan to use the narrative bubbles in a children's comic to convey messages that unwittingly to the publisher and animator facilitate daring robberies. It's only when the young "Joe" (Harry Fowler) and his mates start to put two and two together, and with the help of "Felix" (Alastair Sim) they start to hone in on the kingpin - safe in the knowledge that he is close amongst them and will not go quietly if he is discovered. The humour is dark, subtle and personable, as are the efforts from Jack Warner ("Nightingale") and it is set in a wonderfully gritty post war, bombed-out London full of craters and ruins in which to set the increasingly enjoyable scenario. The youngsters gel well together too, a team effort with the odd red herring and plenty of fisticuffs that compensate for the nor terribly high production standards (especially the tinny audio). Remembering the environment in which it was made, it's a remarkably enjoyable and light-hearted indication that war was over and that the sunlit uplands were again on the horizon. Good fun.