During the 1700s, a masked bandit robs the rich and aids the poor, to the chagrin of the authorities and the corrupt nobility, and prompting the king to task a ruthless man from the Colonies... Read allDuring the 1700s, a masked bandit robs the rich and aids the poor, to the chagrin of the authorities and the corrupt nobility, and prompting the king to task a ruthless man from the Colonies to capture the outlaw.During the 1700s, a masked bandit robs the rich and aids the poor, to the chagrin of the authorities and the corrupt nobility, and prompting the king to task a ruthless man from the Colonies to capture the outlaw.
- Tim
- (as Henry Morgan)
- British Soldier
- (uncredited)
- Redcoat
- (uncredited)
- Loyalist
- (uncredited)
- Dowager at Ball
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
The film is set during the 1700s and concerns aristocratic highwayman Phillip Friend (Jeremy) and his story about holding people up and robbing them and his love life and the enemies that want to capture him.
Unfortunately, the film has so much that is wrong with it. The beginning bogs you down with an awful narration alongside what you eventually realize is poetry. This is because it is delivered so badly you don't immediately tune in to the rhymes that are being recited. Mainly, the film is just boring and it progresses slowly. Friend is terribly wooden in the lead role and he pronounces everything in that awful plummy manner. The film isn't the best quality. We also get comical dramatic music thrown in at random moments and terrible editing that suddenly cuts away from one scene and lands you somewhere completely different. As the film develops like this, you laugh at how bad it is and the audience will expect Sid James and Kenneth Williams to appear in the tradition of the "Carry On" films.
However, it is filmed in Cinecolour and this is a plus point as you can see vibrant reds and greens. You are basically watching for the costumes. As the film continued, it struck me that maybe I should be watching it with 3-D glasses. One scene with a fire led me to this thought. It isn't filmed in 3-D but it looks like it might be so to entertain myself I watched the rest of the film with my 3-D glasses on. I think it improved things.
Anyway, I had to fast forward this total nonsense and the end contains a romantic ghostly touch. I usually enjoy these types of endings. Unfortunately, there is also some more poetry delivered appallingly.
Did you know
- TriviaA screenplay for this film was approved by Alfred Noyes, author of its source poem, as early as the spring of 1947. First announced for a shoot in England over the summer of 1950, ''The Highwayman'' would in fact be filmed in Hollywood - with Simi Valley location shooting - from February 1951.
- Quotes
NARRATOR: And still of a winter's night, they say, when the wind is in the trees, / When the moon is a ghostly galleon tossed upon cloudy seas, / When the road is a ribbon of moonlight looping the purple moor, / A highwayman comes riding, riding, riding, / A highwayman comes riding up to the old inn door.
Details
- Runtime1 hour 22 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1