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The Black Rider

  • 1954
  • 1h 5m
IMDb RATING
5.5/10
259
YOUR RATING
The Black Rider (1954)
CrimeThriller

When young reporter and amateur biker Jerry Marsh investigates a mysterious hooded figure on a motorbike, he discovers crooks hiding out in a ruined castle with atomic sabotage on their mind... Read allWhen young reporter and amateur biker Jerry Marsh investigates a mysterious hooded figure on a motorbike, he discovers crooks hiding out in a ruined castle with atomic sabotage on their minds...When young reporter and amateur biker Jerry Marsh investigates a mysterious hooded figure on a motorbike, he discovers crooks hiding out in a ruined castle with atomic sabotage on their minds...

  • Director
    • Wolf Rilla
  • Writer
    • A.R. Rawlinson
  • Stars
    • Jimmy Hanley
    • Rona Anderson
    • Leslie Dwyer
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.5/10
    259
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Wolf Rilla
    • Writer
      • A.R. Rawlinson
    • Stars
      • Jimmy Hanley
      • Rona Anderson
      • Leslie Dwyer
    • 14User reviews
    • 6Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos6

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    Top cast27

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    Jimmy Hanley
    Jimmy Hanley
    • Jerry Marsh
    Rona Anderson
    Rona Anderson
    • Mary Plack
    Leslie Dwyer
    Leslie Dwyer
    • Robert Plack
    Lionel Jeffries
    Lionel Jeffries
    • Martin Brenner
    Beatrice Varley
    Beatrice Varley
    • Mrs. Marsh
    Michael Golden
    • Rakoff
    Valerie Hanson
    • Karen
    Vincent Ball
    Vincent Ball
    • Ted Lintott
    Edwin Richfield
    Edwin Richfield
    • Geoff Morgan
    Kenneth Connor
    Kenneth Connor
    • George Amble
    Robert Rietty
    Robert Rietty
    • Mario
    James Raglan
    • Rackton
    Frank Atkinson
    Frank Atkinson
    • Landlord
    Edie Martin
    Edie Martin
    • Elderly Lady
    Peter Swanwick
    Peter Swanwick
    • Holiday-Maker
    Sarah Davies
    • Holiday-Maker's Wife
    John Pike
    • Holiday-Maker's Son
    Anne Gilleno
    • Joyce
    • Director
      • Wolf Rilla
    • Writer
      • A.R. Rawlinson
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews14

    5.5259
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    Featured reviews

    7chris_gaskin123

    A good old British drama

    I only recently found out about this movie thanks to ITV screening it. As it was on during the early hours, I set the video to record it and was pleased I did.

    A group of smugglers are 'haunting' a castle, which happens to be haunted anyway by a monk. One of the smugglers poses as this monk and frightens some of the locals. A reporter and his girlfriend decide to investigate this and discover these smugglers are importing parts to build an atomic bomb which could course great loss of life and destruction over a large area. They get arrested at the end.

    This movie also gives you an idea on what life was like during the 1950's including a village fete which were popular at the time and still are today.

    The nuclear jitters of the time probably spawned the movie, which was made at the height of the Atomic Age.

    As well as Jimmy Hanley, it also stars Lionel Jefferies (Chitty Chitty Bang Bang) and Carry On star Kenneth Conner. All play good parts. The movie has a great theme and score too.

    This movie is worth watching if you get the chance as it is rather hold to get hold of.

    Rating: 3 and a half stars out of 5.
    7clanciai

    Dark smuggling business going on in a small town on the east coast.

    A trifle of a film but not without interesting deserts. The story is about smuggling, but no one has any idea of what is being smuggled or by whom and for what, while gradually Lionel Jeffries (later known from many Peter Sellers comedies) emerges as the leading villain. It is an idyllic and cozy film from a small town and its quiet life, while the plot gradually emerges as more and more intriguing in assuming impressive dimensions. It is great entertainment with a finale of some suspense, but it's certainly not a great film, but it will do for a change, if you need someting totally different.
    5geoffm60295

    Cheaply made B Film that celebrates British motorbikes

    'Black Rider' is a low budget B film, which sees the bright and breezy Jimmy Hanley, the 'honest and congenial young man next door type' endeavouring to foil the dastardly, rogue Lionel Jeffries and his henchmen from carrying out atomic sabotage in a sleepy coastal town. The storyline is something out of a boy's comic of that era, with the oily and supercilious moustached villain, Jefferies, always appropriately dressed in a black suit, with our forever smiling and irrepressibly, cheerful Hanley, who is cast as the hero as well as a local reporter. It was one of those cheaply made films that was a time 'filler' to complement the main A film. The film is not to be taken seriously as a crime story, but more of a homage to the importance of British motorcycles of the early 1950's, when buying a car was out of the financial reach of most working class young men, whereas the average young bloke could aspire to becoming liberated by buying a Triumph or Norton motorbike and thus enjoy the freedom which the countryside had to offer. Motor bikes and youth in the 50's would be forever associated with the young American rebel leader, Marlon Brando, terrorising a town with his gang in 'The Wild One.' This film couldn't be further away from rebellious, 'angry young men' as Jimmy Hanley is the very epitome of modesty, honesty and respectability. His 'eager to please' character provides no menace or edge. Indeed. Hanley's jolly character and his very proper and cosy relationship with Rona Anderson, marks him down as a young man every prospective mother would want their daughter to wed. The film itself reveals a forgotten 1950's world of a quintessentially quiet British coastal town, with the pub as its social hub, where local folk were respectful, warm hearted, and where violence, crudity and sexual innuendos were conspicuous by their absence!
    6richardchatten

    A Spectre Haunts Nettlefold

    Riding motorcycles (as they're called here) is one of the bad habits Jimmy Hanley picked up in the army as a dispatch rider at Normandy. Postwar as a member of the Swanhaven Motorcycling Club he tears along the South Coast (attractively shot both by day and by night by veteran cameraman Geoffrey Faithfull) with foxy librarian Rona Anderson on his pillion in the face of initial criticism from her father that they're just "nasty, noisy, clattering bags of machinery" until his path crosses that of 'The Black Monk', played with an Italian accent by veteran voice man Robert Rietty.

    SPOILER COMING: As in countless Children's Film Foundation productions and episodes of 'Scooby Doo' the phantom turns out to be a courier for a bunch of smugglers, this time led by Lionel Jeffries (on this occasion the 'MacGuffin' being components for "an atomic sabotage weapon"). All at just 66 minutes and carrying a 'U' certificate; with a jaunty saxophone and guitar score by Wilfred Burns that will stay in your head long after you've forgotten the rest of the film.
    6didi-5

    not the British 'Wild One'

    If you remove the thought that Jimmy Hanley is the British Marlon Brando in this biker movie made around the same time as the classic 'The Wild One', then you might enjoy this laid-back tale of smugglers, deceit, dads, and dark pubs.

    Jerry (Hanley) is a reporter who rides a motorbike despite the disapproval of his parents - the fact that he seems rather elderly is neither here nor there! There's a girlfriend, a local legend of a ghost, and a nice comic turn from a young Kenneth Connor.

    The local rich chappie and maybe villain of the piece is Lionel Jeffries, in a reliable performance. Hanley himself is adequate but perhaps an actor like Albert Finney would have been so much more interesting as Jerry. However, 'The Black Rider' is a good wheeze and a decent little B movie.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Jerry writes for the "Swanhaven News and Mail", run by Robert Plack.
    • Goofs
      Jerry argues with Mary's dad in the living room which he then exits through a door to the hallway, but in the next frame he re-enters the living room with Mary from the door to the garden.
    • Quotes

      Mary Plack: [When her son rides off with Plack's daughter on his new motorcycle] We shall never see them alive again. They'll be brought home in an ambulance.

      Robert Plack: Well, they needn't expect to see me at the funeral!

    • Connections
      Featured in Truly, Madly, Cheaply!: British B Movies (2008)
    • Soundtracks
      Over the Waves
      (uncredited)

      Music by Juventino Rosas

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 1954 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Languages
      • English
      • Italian
    • Filming locations
      • Nettlefold Studios, Walton-on-Thames, Surrey, England, UK(studio: produced at)
    • Production company
      • Balblair Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 5m(65 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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