• Source: Gaolbreak
  • Gaolbreak is a 1962 British second feature crime film directed by Francis Searle and starring Peter Reynolds, Avice Landone and Carol White. The film was released as a supporting feature to Tiara Tahiti (1962).


    Plot


    A family of thieves plan a jewellery store robbery. One of them is the safecracking expert, and when he is arrested and jailed, they spring him from prison so he can take part in the job.


    Cast


    Peter Reynolds as Eddie Wallis
    Avice Landone as Mrs. Wallis
    David Kernan as Len Rogerson
    Carol White as Carol Marshall
    John Blythe as Slim
    David Gregory as Ron Wallis
    Robert Desmond as Page
    Stewart Guidotti as John
    Geoffrey Hibbert as Dr. Cambus
    Robert Fyfe as Wally
    Carl Bernard as Inspector Brand
    Katharine Page as Mrs. Harris
    Sidney Vivian as Mr. Marshall
    Marianne Stone as Mrs. Marshall
    Ivor Dean as Barrington
    André Mikhelson as Martinetti
    Middleton Woods as Jonah
    Reginald Hearne as auctioneer
    Edward Ogden as Det. Sgt. Johnson
    Frank Hawkins as prison officer
    Neil Wilson as beat PC
    Jack Taylor as uniformed policeman
    John H. Watson as 2nd uniformed policeman
    Michael Beint as 2nd prison officer
    Laurie Leigh as Shirley
    Angela Ramsden as Hazel


    Production


    The film was made by Butcher's Film Service, and shot at Twickenham Studios in West London, and on location. The film's sets were designed by the art director Duncan Sutherland.


    Critical reception


    Monthly Film Bulletin said "Running true to the traditional formula of British crime-story second features, this is nevertheless well cast and crisply put over. Most of the characters are effectively drawn but the prison escape looks far too easy."
    Steve Chibnall wrote in British Crime Cinema: "The presence of a young Carol White ... cannot compensate for the film's flat and sluggish direction, a script that would be embarrassingly simplistic in a children's matinee and two of the least-threatening villains in screen history (a newsagent and his mum)."
    The Radio Times Guide to Films gave the film 1/5 stars, writing: "This typically down-at-heel crime story from low-budget specialists Butcher's is spiced up by a subplot about an unwanted pregnancy. It features an early performance by Carol White, who found fame in Ken Loach's television play Cathy Come Home [1966] and his feature Poor Cow [1967]. Sadly, this tale has barely enough plot to make a TV episode, let alone keep a cinema audience happy, and seems stretched even at its one-hour running."


    References




    External links


    Gaolbreak at IMDb
    Gaolbreak at Letterbox DVD
    Gaolbreak at BFI
    Gaolbreak at ReelStreets

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