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Flannelfoot

  • 1953
  • 1h 14m
IMDb RATING
5.4/10
107
YOUR RATING
Mary Germaine, Ronald Howard, and Jack Watling in Flannelfoot (1953)
CrimeDrama

Thriller about a notorious jewel thief and murderer.Thriller about a notorious jewel thief and murderer.Thriller about a notorious jewel thief and murderer.

  • Director
    • Maclean Rogers
  • Writers
    • Jack Henry
    • Carl Heck
  • Stars
    • Ronald Howard
    • Mary Germaine
    • Jack Watling
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.4/10
    107
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Maclean Rogers
    • Writers
      • Jack Henry
      • Carl Heck
    • Stars
      • Ronald Howard
      • Mary Germaine
      • Jack Watling
    • 10User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos1

    View Poster

    Top cast18

    Edit
    Ronald Howard
    Ronald Howard
    • Detective Sgt. Fitzgerald
    Mary Germaine
    • Kathleen Fraser
    Jack Watling
    Jack Watling
    • Frank Mitchell
    Ronald Adam
    Ronald Adam
    • Inspector Duggan
    Stuart Lindsell
    • Lord Wexford
    • (as R. Stuart Lindsel)
    Gene Anderson
    • Renee Wexford
    Kim Peacock
    Kim Peacock
    • Tyrone Fraser
    Peter Hammond
    Peter Hammond
    • Andy Fraser
    Ronald Leigh-Hunt
    Ronald Leigh-Hunt
    • Dr. Milligan
    • (as Ronald Leigh Hunt)
    Graham Stark
    Graham Stark
    • Ginger Watkins)
    Edwin Richfield
    Edwin Richfield
    • Bill Neilson
    Alastair Hunter
    Alastair Hunter
    • Superintendent Carter
    • (as Alistair Hunter)
    Vanda Godsell
    Vanda Godsell
    • Angela Neilson
    Adrienne Scott
    • Cynthia Leyland
    Michael McCarthy
    • Hawkins
    Diana Coupland
    • The Singer
    Jack Taylor
    • Police Officer in Patrol Car
    • (uncredited)
    John Wilder
    • Police Sergeant
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Maclean Rogers
    • Writers
      • Jack Henry
      • Carl Heck
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews10

    5.4107
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    10

    Featured reviews

    4geoffm60295

    Mediocre B Film fails to ignite interest.

    A successful jewel thief and murderer keeps Scotland Yard on its toes, as well as on the back foot, as he continues to elude their clutches!! Enter languid, pipe smoking detective, Ronald Howard and his senior colleague, Ronald Howard. Both men seem disinterested and lacking in energy, hence the film plods along, and generally there is far too much talking and a conspicuous lack of action or tension. Most of the scenes are only enlivened by the amount of smoking and drinking which goes on in sitting rooms by various middle class men in suits and the ladies in their cocktail dresses. The storyline meanders aimlessly along, with the result that it robs the film of any direction or purpose. There is no attempt to flesh out any of the characters, who thus come across as unconvincing and one dimensional. This is a dull, low budget B film, which was made as a time filler.
    4Leofwine_draca

    Plodding detective tale

    FLANNELFOOT is yet another detective thriller from director Maclean Rogers, who also handled the similarly-themed Paul Temple films and MARK OF THE PHOENIX. This one's about a notorious jewel thief (the oddly-monikered 'Flannelfoot') who turns to murder to cover up his crimes. The police are in hot pursuit in a chase that takes them across Europe.

    There's really nothing about FLANNELFOOT that makes it stand out from the crowd; everything about it is distinctly ordinary, not least the lead performance from Ronald Howard (son of the more famous Leslie). Ronald Adam is better even if he's once again typecast as a detective, and there are supporting roles for Ronald Leigh-Hunt and Graham Stark, but it's all so, well, ordinary, that you won't really care.

    The plotting is chock full of the usual twists and turns and red herrings and it only really starts getting lively for the climax (and Rogers once again can't resist utilising a rooftop setting for the ending). But FLANNELFOOT has a cheap, workmanlike quality to it which saps the viewer's enjoyment.
    6trimmerb1234

    So who is the well known face in this smudgy British noir?

    It's TV's Diana Coupland (1928-2006) '70s sitcom star and TV regular, appearing in her first film as a night club band singer. What is noticeable is how well she sings. So she should - that was her first career IMDb notes.

    Ronald Adam was an excellent actor, frequently cast, and at his best, as an authority figure (Prime Minister in "Seven Days to Noon"). Once at least as baddie mastermind. Here though he is a detective, old enough to be his boss's father. The sight of him apologising to his younger boss "Sorry, Sir, I don't know what came over me" is strange one. I am guessing that this was the only in his career.

    Graham Stark plays a convincing professional nark.

    The film tries too hard to model itself on its American noir predecessors. Comedy band Bonzo Dog once lampooned slavish imitation of the genre: "Have you got a light, Mack?" "No but I've got a dark brown overcoat" The print shown unfortunately is very soft - if the print had been sharp and sparkling and photography seen to better advantage, I think viewers would have a better opinion of it. As it is, it is the cinematic equivalent of a long rainy afternoon, the sound track even sounds like one.
    8wilvram

    Enjoyably old-fashioned mystery

    After some melodramatic title music, we open with that near obligatory scene of 1950s crime films, a woman singing in a nightclub to an audience of heavy smokers, in this case it's Diana Coupland in her film debut. In fact she lights one up herself as she goes into her rendition of 'fascinating man' It is post-war Berlin and Inspector Duggan (Ronald Adam), is apparently on the trail of a notorious black marketeer, who then makes an unsuccessful attempt on his life, seriously injuring him in the process.

    We now switch to London, where Duggan, assisted by Detective-Sergeant Fitzgerald (Ronald Howard) is put on to the case of Flannelfoot, a ruthlessly successful burglar and jewel thief whom is believed to be connected with the events in Berlin, though Duggan claims he has lost his memory of much that happened there. Assisting the police is a newspaper proprietor and his ace crime reporter Frank Mitchell (Jack Watling). Attempts are made to trap the eponymous villain, but it is only after two murders and several more robberies that he is finally caught.

    Though there was a notorious burglar in the 1930s known as Flannelfoot, whose sordid crimes took place far from the high society background depicted here, and the story is attributed to Ex-Inspector Jack Henry, it owes a great deal to authors Edgar Wallace and Francis Durbridge. A small-time cockney crook and informer (Graham Stark) is murdered right under the noses of the police and an outwardly respectable doctor is a fence of stolen jewels. There are shoals of Red Herrings, enabling the identity of the villain, 'a master of accents and disguise' and portrayed in classic stage fashion, wearing a slouch hat, dark glasses and muffler, to come as a satisfactory surprise. It all ends with a fight on a roof, a conclusion that director Maclean Rogers was so fond of that he used it in at least two other thrillers, PAUL TEMPLE RETURNS, and ASSIGNMENT REDHEAD, the latter incorporating footage of Ronald Adam by the ruins of the Berlin building. Like most of Rogers' films, FLANNELFOOT is silly at times, preposterous at others, but great entertainment for fans of British second features.
    2richardchatten

    A Very Poor Man's 'Ringer'

    The title suggests a comedy, but is actually the alias of an arch criminal who occasionally kills someone to keep things interesting; presumably inspired by Edgar Wallace's 'The Ringer', the most recent film version of which had hit cinemas the previous year.

    Set mostly in the stately home of newspaper baron Lord Wrexford, in which people spend most of the film pedestrianly lined up by director Maclean Rogers discussing the case; Rogers occasionally showing a modicum of visual imagination when somebody else gets murdered (there's a remarkably graphic shot of a dead man with his eyes open), and in the prologue set in Berlin which begins with a close-up a very young Diana Coupland as a leggy nightclub singer languidly lighting up (less surprising than it at first sounds to those who know she later dubbed Ursula Andress's singing voice in 'Dr.No').

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Diana Coupland'd debut.
    • Quotes

      Lord Wexford: [he enters the pub] Whisky, please, Miss, large one. 'Pon my soul, if it isn't young Harry Fitzgerald. Well, how are you my boy?

      Sgt. Fitzgerald: Lord Wexford, I'm glad to see you again, Sir.

      Lord Wexford: Here, have a drink. Fill that up, whatever it is.

      Sgt. Fitzgerald: Light ale.

      Lord Wexford: Now, where have you been hiding all these years?

      Sgt. Fitzgerald: Well, things weren't so good for us after father died so I don't hit the high spots like a used to.

      Lord Wexford: Reformed character, eh? Well, here we are,

      [he hands Fitzgerald his drink]

      Lord Wexford: Well, here's joy.

      Sgt. Fitzgerald: Cheers!

      Lord Wexford: We couldn't have met at a better time. This is going to be quite a night.

      Sgt. Fitzgerald: Oh, yeah?

      Lord Wexford: Yes, this is where Fleet Street shows Scotland Yard what's what.

      Sgt. Fitzgerald: Oh, really?

      Lord Wexford: Yeah, you know what these policemen are - good fellows, conscientious - but solid bone from the neck up.

      Sgt. Fitzgerald: Mmm... very solid, yes.

      Lord Wexford: Look, keep this to yourself but my friends and I are hoping to pull off something that Scotland Yard has failed to do for months... yes, we're going to lay that scoundrel Flannelfoot by the heels.

      Sgt. Fitzgerald: Well, that's most astonishing.

      Lord Wexford: You know I have a sort of feeling that Scotland Yard are going to look pretty silly before the night's finished.

      [they both laugh]

      policeman: Excuse me, Sergeant, Superintendent Carter would like a word with you on the phone.

      Sgt. Fitzgerald: Oh, thanks, Pat. Excuse me, won't you, Sir?

      Lord Wexford: Superintendent...? Then who...?

      policeman: That's Detective Sergeant Fitzgerald, Sir.

    • Crazy credits
      Opening credits prologue: BERLIN
    • Soundtracks
      Fascinating Man
      Music and Lyric by John Tore (as John Toré)

      Sung by Diana Coupland (uncredited)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 1953 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Filming locations
      • Nettlefold Studios, Walton-on-Thames, Surrey, England, UK(studio: produced at Nettlefold Studios Walton-On-Thames)
    • Production company
      • E.J. Fancey Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 14m(74 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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