अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंSpecial Agent Dick Barton uncovers a ring of international psychopathic criminals with plans to dominate the world using a terrifying weapon of mass destruction.Special Agent Dick Barton uncovers a ring of international psychopathic criminals with plans to dominate the world using a terrifying weapon of mass destruction.Special Agent Dick Barton uncovers a ring of international psychopathic criminals with plans to dominate the world using a terrifying weapon of mass destruction.
Larry Taylor
- Nick
- (as Laurie Taylor)
Daniel Brown
- Henchman
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Billy Cotton
- Bandleader
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Jimmy O'Dea
- Man
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Wensley Pithey
- Sergeant - Military Police
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Victor Platt
- Waiter in Nightclub
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
The second of Hammer's short-lived Dick Barton series anticipates their sci-fiers of the mid-fifties, and being a film there's much more action than talk. It also benefits from extensive locations, leading up to a vigorous punch-up on - of all places - the Blackpool Tower; which is being used to transmit death rays!
Dick Barton Strikes Back was the second of Hammer's Dick Barton films to be released, but was actually the last to be filmed. It's easily the best of the three films, director Godfrey Grayson getting the formula just right, eschewing the comedy of the first film and largely avoiding the silly contrivances that ruined both Dick Barton Special Agent and Dick Barton at Bay. This one ups the seriousness and level of action and is all the better for it.
The result feels very much like a proto-James Bond adventure, with it's suave British hero (once again played by Don Stannard), a very Fleming-style villain in Fouracada (Sebastian Cabot), and a diabolical plot that sees the bad guys using a powerful sonic weapon of mass destruction to help their un-specified country to achieve world domination. There's even a femme fatale who turns ally in the form of Tina (Jean Lodge), and several scenes in which the antagonists have an opportunity to kill Barton once and for all, but instead opt to put him in a perilous situation from which he has a chance to escape. It makes one wonder whether Ian Fleming was inspired in some part by Barton when creating Bond.
After plenty of deft detective work, the main clue being a piece of jaunty gypsy music heard at the location of each of Fourocada's test sites, Barton tracks down the sonic device to the top of the Blackpool Tower. The final act is an exciting race against time as Barton fights his way to the top of the tower, past various henchmen, to confront the mastermind of the whole dastardly scheme.
Far better than the other Barton films, Dick Barton Strikes Back would have been followed by more adventures for the special agent, if only star Stannard hadn't been killed in a car crash shortly after filming - a real shame, because this one saw the series going in the right direction, and further films could have catapulted Stannard to super-stardom.
6.5/10, rounded up to 7 for IMDb.
The result feels very much like a proto-James Bond adventure, with it's suave British hero (once again played by Don Stannard), a very Fleming-style villain in Fouracada (Sebastian Cabot), and a diabolical plot that sees the bad guys using a powerful sonic weapon of mass destruction to help their un-specified country to achieve world domination. There's even a femme fatale who turns ally in the form of Tina (Jean Lodge), and several scenes in which the antagonists have an opportunity to kill Barton once and for all, but instead opt to put him in a perilous situation from which he has a chance to escape. It makes one wonder whether Ian Fleming was inspired in some part by Barton when creating Bond.
After plenty of deft detective work, the main clue being a piece of jaunty gypsy music heard at the location of each of Fourocada's test sites, Barton tracks down the sonic device to the top of the Blackpool Tower. The final act is an exciting race against time as Barton fights his way to the top of the tower, past various henchmen, to confront the mastermind of the whole dastardly scheme.
Far better than the other Barton films, Dick Barton Strikes Back would have been followed by more adventures for the special agent, if only star Stannard hadn't been killed in a car crash shortly after filming - a real shame, because this one saw the series going in the right direction, and further films could have catapulted Stannard to super-stardom.
6.5/10, rounded up to 7 for IMDb.
this was the second film in the Dick Barton boxed set.It is better than Dick Barton secret Agent because it would be virtually impossible for it to be worse.The location shots are a big plus but the silly plot is almost terminal boredom.What is worse the noise emitted by the machine at the climax sounds like a police siren and goes on and on.It gave me a headache so i had to double the disc speed so i could not its incessant wailing on the soundtrack.the fight scenes are not very well orchestrated.It is rather strange that apart from the 3 leads no other actors names are shown with the front credits.Perhaps they asked that this be done to spare their blushes.I have one more to view.I hope it gets better.
Based upon the long running Dick Barton series from radio DICK BARTON STRIKES BACK is not without interest if only to give a view of British immediate post war austerity and mentality . Britain was quite rightly proud of the fact that from the Summer of 1940 through to most of 1941 she stood alone against German Nazism and Italian fascism . Her reward for winning the war was losing the subsequent peace . It was also obvious in the aftermath of the war that the standard of living in Britain had actually fallen compared to the times when the U-Boats patrolled the Atlantic and the Luftwaffe had bombed British cities
This is reflected in DBSB right from the opening scene where Dick and Snowey go in to a nightclub and foreign cultural influences abound . Snowey can't get a pint of bitter and if that isn't bad enough the waiting staff who are all foreign are in league with another bunch of foreigners led by a villain with the name of Fouracada . You can't help noticing that these criminals aren't of traditional Anglo Saxon stock and while you can accuse the film of a xenophobic mindset this would merely reflect the average British experience of other cultures . Europeans would be fascists , Zionists would be terrorists , Arabs would be rabid nationalists with new found power via oil and even an erstwhile ally such as America would be a cynical fair weather friend . Perhaps most sadly of all the Soviet Union would be on a par with Hitler's Germany #
For a film that uses a radio series as its source this is a B movie that deserves some credit for trying to be cinematic in feel .What I did notice is that its outlandish plot featuring a death ray controlled by a bunch of nasty foreigners does have a lot in common in the James Bond franchise but their are important differences . There's no exotic locations and a climax set around Blackpool pleasure beach isn't something you'd get in a Fleming story . Don Stannard as Barton might be square jawed but he's not a dirty fighter and when he gets in to a punch up with one of the bad guys it's unexpected he doesn't throw him out of the lift door . I'm guessing in those days it was only Johnny Foreigner who would do something unsporting like that ?
This is reflected in DBSB right from the opening scene where Dick and Snowey go in to a nightclub and foreign cultural influences abound . Snowey can't get a pint of bitter and if that isn't bad enough the waiting staff who are all foreign are in league with another bunch of foreigners led by a villain with the name of Fouracada . You can't help noticing that these criminals aren't of traditional Anglo Saxon stock and while you can accuse the film of a xenophobic mindset this would merely reflect the average British experience of other cultures . Europeans would be fascists , Zionists would be terrorists , Arabs would be rabid nationalists with new found power via oil and even an erstwhile ally such as America would be a cynical fair weather friend . Perhaps most sadly of all the Soviet Union would be on a par with Hitler's Germany #
For a film that uses a radio series as its source this is a B movie that deserves some credit for trying to be cinematic in feel .What I did notice is that its outlandish plot featuring a death ray controlled by a bunch of nasty foreigners does have a lot in common in the James Bond franchise but their are important differences . There's no exotic locations and a climax set around Blackpool pleasure beach isn't something you'd get in a Fleming story . Don Stannard as Barton might be square jawed but he's not a dirty fighter and when he gets in to a punch up with one of the bad guys it's unexpected he doesn't throw him out of the lift door . I'm guessing in those days it was only Johnny Foreigner who would do something unsporting like that ?
In preparation for the latest edition of the "House of Hammer" podcast, I watched the 1949 film "Dick Barton Strikes Back", a proto James Bond crossed with Sherlock Holmes character, for whom Hammer made a series of films.
Dick Barton (Don Stanard) and his associate Snowy White (Bruce Walker) are turned on to new threat by a US agent, who subsequently turns up dead. Fouracada (Sebastian Cabot) has come to the UK to test a new weapon, and is not prepared for Barton to threaten it's progress. When the inhabitants of a northern town are all killed, simultaneously, in mysterious circumstances, it's up to Barton to track down Fouracada and save the nation again.
I actually quite liked this. Even with the stiff upper lip of it all, the performances were mostly solid and the film looks a lot better than the Hammer films from just a few years earlier. At just 68 minutes the story whizzes along, putting Barton in danger Saturday morning serial style before showing an unlikely escape. There's a "Hooded claw" style silent overlord for the villains, the reveal of whom is pretty obvious, but doesn't undermine the film, even when he reveals the entire plan at his time of triumph. The best bit though is the consistent use of "The Devil's Gallop" which was his theme tune at the time but has, unfortunately for the sincerity of the film, been entirely corrupted for me by Mitchell and Webb's "Digby Chicken Caesar" sketch.
There's a bit of post-war xenophobia with the villains coming from an unnamed foreign country but looking an awful lot like Romany gypsy stereotypes. The noise of the sonic weapon, which we hear for lengthy sections of the film is extremely annoying. The character of Snowy really doesn't add much, other than reflecting how great Barton is and his obsession with getting a pint of Bitter.
But when the Blackpool Tower finale reached it's conclusion (and I put my headphones back on) I was reasonably satisfied with what I'd seen.
Dick Barton (Don Stanard) and his associate Snowy White (Bruce Walker) are turned on to new threat by a US agent, who subsequently turns up dead. Fouracada (Sebastian Cabot) has come to the UK to test a new weapon, and is not prepared for Barton to threaten it's progress. When the inhabitants of a northern town are all killed, simultaneously, in mysterious circumstances, it's up to Barton to track down Fouracada and save the nation again.
I actually quite liked this. Even with the stiff upper lip of it all, the performances were mostly solid and the film looks a lot better than the Hammer films from just a few years earlier. At just 68 minutes the story whizzes along, putting Barton in danger Saturday morning serial style before showing an unlikely escape. There's a "Hooded claw" style silent overlord for the villains, the reveal of whom is pretty obvious, but doesn't undermine the film, even when he reveals the entire plan at his time of triumph. The best bit though is the consistent use of "The Devil's Gallop" which was his theme tune at the time but has, unfortunately for the sincerity of the film, been entirely corrupted for me by Mitchell and Webb's "Digby Chicken Caesar" sketch.
There's a bit of post-war xenophobia with the villains coming from an unnamed foreign country but looking an awful lot like Romany gypsy stereotypes. The noise of the sonic weapon, which we hear for lengthy sections of the film is extremely annoying. The character of Snowy really doesn't add much, other than reflecting how great Barton is and his obsession with getting a pint of Bitter.
But when the Blackpool Tower finale reached it's conclusion (and I put my headphones back on) I was reasonably satisfied with what I'd seen.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाDon Stannard (Dick Barton) and Sebastian Cabot (Fouracada) were involved in a car crash in Cookham Dean, Berkshire, England, UK on July 9, 1949. Stannard, who was driving, was killed instantly but Cabot escaped with only minor injuries.
- गूफ़When climbing the tower, Barton has two opportunities to take the protective headphones off the villains to protect himself, but for some reason never bothers.
- कनेक्शनFeatured in The World of Hammer: Sci-Fi (1994)
- साउंडट्रैकThe Devil's Galop
Composed by Charles Williams (uncredited)
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- 1.37 : 1
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टॉप गैप
By what name was Dick Barton Strikes Back (1949) officially released in Canada in English?
जवाब