U.S. agent Kent Foster pursues traitorous murderer Nick Randall using singer Angela Booth as bait. Angela escapes prison with Foster's help to meet Randall on New Year's Eve but flees after ... Read allU.S. agent Kent Foster pursues traitorous murderer Nick Randall using singer Angela Booth as bait. Angela escapes prison with Foster's help to meet Randall on New Year's Eve but flees after Randall assaults her, confirming his true nature.U.S. agent Kent Foster pursues traitorous murderer Nick Randall using singer Angela Booth as bait. Angela escapes prison with Foster's help to meet Randall on New Year's Eve but flees after Randall assaults her, confirming his true nature.
Douglas Argent
- Reveller
- (uncredited)
Hermione Baddeley
- Grace
- (uncredited)
Sidney Brahms
- Reveller
- (uncredited)
Olwen Brookes
- Hackett
- (uncredited)
Sheila Burrell
- Bates
- (uncredited)
Fanny Carby
- Brooker
- (uncredited)
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- Writers
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Featured reviews
I saw her in Wicked Woman (1953) on youtube, some has dubbed this from VHS , for our viewing pleasure, I know this because the tracking at the bottom needs a bit of ajustment, but that's neither here nor there, what is important are these wonderful thespians and gems from the era...
I was a bit flummoxed for at some point this took a strange turn and sort of jumbled up everything sort of willy-nilly you see, and I ceased to be able to distinguish from regular dames and bad dames and good guys and bad guys since everything sort of took a big leap in the sophistic episodes of "Three's Company" see where everything sort of gets mixed up , but like the episode everything ambiguous became clear and resplendent and once again order out of chaos was of course restored! Huzza, huzza! lol,
But yes, this dame is cool, this dame really knows how to pose for the screen, I think most of the thespians especially the female actresses really knew about lighting as they were poised to pose for the camera, terrific!
A really fun film, a good show, a good show! Seeing Beverly run away into the night with roman candles exploding everywhere behind her made the flic for me, how about you?
I was a bit flummoxed for at some point this took a strange turn and sort of jumbled up everything sort of willy-nilly you see, and I ceased to be able to distinguish from regular dames and bad dames and good guys and bad guys since everything sort of took a big leap in the sophistic episodes of "Three's Company" see where everything sort of gets mixed up , but like the episode everything ambiguous became clear and resplendent and once again order out of chaos was of course restored! Huzza, huzza! lol,
But yes, this dame is cool, this dame really knows how to pose for the screen, I think most of the thespians especially the female actresses really knew about lighting as they were poised to pose for the camera, terrific!
A really fun film, a good show, a good show! Seeing Beverly run away into the night with roman candles exploding everywhere behind her made the flic for me, how about you?
In their quest to nab a spy for the Soviet Bloc named "Nick Randall" (Jim Davis), the American State Department decides to follow his girlfriend, "Angela Booth" (Beverly Michaels) to a secret rendezvous the two had planned a few months earlier. The only problem is that Angela is sent to prison in England for a crime she wasn't guilty of. Not wanting to tip their hand, the Americans and British resort to desperate measures to make sure that Angela keeps her appointment with Nick at any costs. At any rate, rather than spoil the film for those who haven't seen it, I will just say that this is a decent enough B-Movie from the mid-50's which might appeal to those who enjoy action-dramas of this nature. I would also like to add that this film is not nearly as risqué as the movie poster printed during this time might lead a person to believe. Again, one has to consider the time period in which it was made. That said, I rate it as average, all things considered.
Yes the late Thora Hird could be a comedienne in roles such as this playing Granny Rafferty, opposite American Beverley Michaels who plays her fellow inmate in a women's prison.Previous reviewers have outlined the plot of a tale of post WWII & the Cold War where both Scotland Yard and the U.S. State Dept mount a joint venture to entrap a traitor/murderer played by Jim Davis (most known in this country for playing JR's father in early episodes of "Dallas").The reference to "Lindberg" in the screenplay I assumed referred to aviator Charles Lindberg when the three escaped women prisoners and baby use an old MG to make their getaway, with Thora joking at the wheel.They make their getaway with the connivance of UK/US authorities before the denouement when Beverley finally realises the rotten relationship she had with the Jim Davis character.Yes I rated it 7/10 and was entertained on this, my first ever viewing.
Beverly Michaels is a new find for me, and I must say I like her a lot! Here she stars as "Blonde Bait" from 1956, also starring Thora Hird, Jim Davis, Paul Cavanagh, and Richard Travis.
Michaels plays a London performer, Angela Booth. She is sent to prison when she tries to leave her possessive employer for her boyfriend Randall (Jim Davis). She winds up hitting him with a mirror, and his connections lead to her being incarcerated.
The U. S. State Department wants her boyfriend because he was a Nazi collaborator. Angela has secret plans to meet Randall on New Year's Eve at the Oxhead Inn so they can run off get married. In order to catch him, it's arranged that Angela escape with the help of "Gran" (Hird), an old-time prisoner. The plan is to follow Angela to wherever the meeting is to take place.
I thought this was a good film, a real B British noir. Michaels is different in this film from the last one I saw her in, Pickup, where she gave Ann Savage's Detour performance a run for its money. She played an abusive, trashy woman. Here she's a woman sincerely in love, who demonstrates some class and possesses humanity.
Thora Hird is a scream. Jim Davis, frankly, is pretty bad. It's no wonder when he returned from Korea, Bette Davis forgot she ever heard of him. He still needed some seasoning.
All in all, entertaining.
Michaels plays a London performer, Angela Booth. She is sent to prison when she tries to leave her possessive employer for her boyfriend Randall (Jim Davis). She winds up hitting him with a mirror, and his connections lead to her being incarcerated.
The U. S. State Department wants her boyfriend because he was a Nazi collaborator. Angela has secret plans to meet Randall on New Year's Eve at the Oxhead Inn so they can run off get married. In order to catch him, it's arranged that Angela escape with the help of "Gran" (Hird), an old-time prisoner. The plan is to follow Angela to wherever the meeting is to take place.
I thought this was a good film, a real B British noir. Michaels is different in this film from the last one I saw her in, Pickup, where she gave Ann Savage's Detour performance a run for its money. She played an abusive, trashy woman. Here she's a woman sincerely in love, who demonstrates some class and possesses humanity.
Thora Hird is a scream. Jim Davis, frankly, is pretty bad. It's no wonder when he returned from Korea, Bette Davis forgot she ever heard of him. He still needed some seasoning.
All in all, entertaining.
Fairly straight laced telling of a Jailbreak to nab a felon and turncoat by the State Department.
They use his girlfriend to lure him in and she happens to be blonde...hence the title.
Most of the story is about the contrived breakout and the end wraps up before you can say jailbreak.
Mildly entertaining while it lasts.
They use his girlfriend to lure him in and she happens to be blonde...hence the title.
Most of the story is about the contrived breakout and the end wraps up before you can say jailbreak.
Mildly entertaining while it lasts.
Did you know
- TriviaFinal film of Joan Harrison.
- ConnectionsEdited from Women Without Men (1956)
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 11m(71 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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