While on vacation, the Saint discovers a much-sought-after music box.While on vacation, the Saint discovers a much-sought-after music box.While on vacation, the Saint discovers a much-sought-after music box.
Leueen MacGrath
- Valerie
- (as Leueen Macgrath)
Eric Clavering
- Reporter at door
- (uncredited)
Noel Dainton
- Commissaire
- (uncredited)
Roddy Hughes
- Valet
- (uncredited)
‘Snow White’ Stars Test Their Wits
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaRKO decided to form a British Company to utilize funds frozen by the British government because of the "Films Act," which limited money taken out of the country to 50% of revenues earned from American films distributed in Great Britain. This was the first film made using those frozen funds.
- GoofsWhen Mary leave's her apartment in England to chase the Saint she packs one suitcase. Later when she arrives at Dorfeld and asks the porter where to find a taxi, she has a suitcase and hatbox.
- Quotes
Monty Hayward: I refuse to be involved in this any further!
Mary Langdon: Is he really going?
Simon Templar, aka The Saint: Yes, as far as the bar.
- ConnectionsFollowed by Le Saint face au Tigre (1941)
Featured review
Entertaining little low-budget entry from Great Britain, it has HUGH SINCLAIR as "The Saint" involved immediately in getting hold of a music box that holds some sort of war secret--although the war itself is never actually named and kept strictly out of sight. SALLY GRAY makes a pleasant female lead, a newspaper reporter who is a lot braver than The Saint's sidekick, played by ARTHUR MACRAE in a most annoying manner. He makes Dr. Watson's Nigel Bruce look like a brain surgeon.
With some obvious studio backgrounds subbing for Switzerland locales, this caper moves along at a fast pace, filling every one of its one hour running time with story development that never lets up.
CECIL PARKER is a smooth villain, but the story has all the familiar ingredients we've come to expect in any Saint outing. The McGuffin is clearly the music box and the plot is kept simple with everyone's concentration on getting hold of it.
Summing up: Passes the time quickly and pleasantly, but Hugh Sinclair is no replacement for George Sanders, no matter how British he is.
With some obvious studio backgrounds subbing for Switzerland locales, this caper moves along at a fast pace, filling every one of its one hour running time with story development that never lets up.
CECIL PARKER is a smooth villain, but the story has all the familiar ingredients we've come to expect in any Saint outing. The McGuffin is clearly the music box and the plot is kept simple with everyone's concentration on getting hold of it.
Summing up: Passes the time quickly and pleasantly, but Hugh Sinclair is no replacement for George Sanders, no matter how British he is.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Pas de vacances pour le Saint
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 1 minute
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content