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The Ladykillers

  • 1955
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 31m
IMDb RATING
7.6/10
33K
YOUR RATING
Alec Guinness, Peter Sellers, Herbert Lom, Danny Green, Katie Johnson, Cecil Parker, and Jack Warner in The Ladykillers (1955)
Official Trailer
Play trailer2:35
5 Videos
99+ Photos
CaperDark ComedyComedyCrime

Five oddball criminals planning a bank robbery rent rooms on a cul-de-sac from an octogenarian widow under the pretext that they are classical musicians.Five oddball criminals planning a bank robbery rent rooms on a cul-de-sac from an octogenarian widow under the pretext that they are classical musicians.Five oddball criminals planning a bank robbery rent rooms on a cul-de-sac from an octogenarian widow under the pretext that they are classical musicians.

  • Director
    • Alexander Mackendrick
  • Writers
    • William Rose
    • Jimmy O'Connor
  • Stars
    • Alec Guinness
    • Peter Sellers
    • Cecil Parker
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.6/10
    33K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Alexander Mackendrick
    • Writers
      • William Rose
      • Jimmy O'Connor
    • Stars
      • Alec Guinness
      • Peter Sellers
      • Cecil Parker
    • 186User reviews
    • 81Critic reviews
    • 91Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 2 wins & 5 nominations total

    Videos5

    The Ladykillers
    Trailer 2:35
    The Ladykillers
    The Ladykillers - Rialto Pictures Trailer
    Trailer 1:30
    The Ladykillers - Rialto Pictures Trailer
    The Ladykillers - Rialto Pictures Trailer
    Trailer 1:30
    The Ladykillers - Rialto Pictures Trailer
    The Ladykillers: Catch The Parrot
    Clip 1:52
    The Ladykillers: Catch The Parrot
    The Ladykillers: Room To Rent (UK)
    Clip 2:08
    The Ladykillers: Room To Rent (UK)
    The Ladykillers: The Gang Arrives (UK)
    Clip 1:55
    The Ladykillers: The Gang Arrives (UK)

    Photos134

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    + 129
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    Top cast48

    Edit
    Alec Guinness
    Alec Guinness
    • Professor Marcus
    Peter Sellers
    Peter Sellers
    • Harry Robinson
    Cecil Parker
    Cecil Parker
    • Claude
    Herbert Lom
    Herbert Lom
    • Louis
    Danny Green
    Danny Green
    • One-Round
    Jack Warner
    Jack Warner
    • The Superintendent
    Katie Johnson
    Katie Johnson
    • Louisa Wilberforce
    Philip Stainton
    • The Sergeant
    Frankie Howerd
    Frankie Howerd
    • The Barrow Boy
    Madge Brindley
    Madge Brindley
    • Large Lady
    • (uncredited)
    Hélène Burls
    • Hypatia
    • (uncredited)
    Jimmy Charters
    • Bystander
    • (uncredited)
    Kenneth Connor
    Kenneth Connor
    • Cab Driver
    • (uncredited)
    Michael Corcoran
    • Burglar
    • (uncredited)
    Michael Corcoran
    • Burglar
    • (uncredited)
    Arthur Dibbs
    • Detective
    • (uncredited)
    Harold Goodwin
    Harold Goodwin
    • Parcels Clerk
    • (uncredited)
    Fred Griffiths
    • Junk Man
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Alexander Mackendrick
    • Writers
      • William Rose
      • Jimmy O'Connor
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews186

    7.633.3K
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    Featured reviews

    pauls-room

    best ever Ealing comedy

    If you had to choose a film that represented British Cinema at its best, you'd be hard-pressed to find one better than "The Ladykillers". The story, the sets, the actors, the photography, the humour, are all perfect. There isn't a bad performance anywhere, and that goes for everyone, including those who only briefly appear. The ladies who arrive for an afternoon tea party are all wonderful. Even the parrot, who creates mayhem amongst the thieves by escaping and flying around the room, puts in a perfect performance. Curiously the story is by an American, yet he has managed to portray all the idiosyncrasies that makes British humour what is is. The wonderful thing about the bunch of thieves is that they are all equally excellent. Alec Guinness with his crooked teeth, Peter Sellers' spiv, Herbert Lom's dark psychopath, Cecil Parker's colonel character and Danny Green's dumb heavyweight - with the wonderful nickname of one-round. The cameo performances of people like Frankie Howerd, Jack Warner, just add to the completeness of the film. But Katie Johnson is absolutely superb and the house she lives in, a fantastic creation of a Victorian house precariously sitting on top of a railway tunnel. The ending is incredible and if you thought that it might tail off here, well it doesn't. I cannot recommend it enough. Any student of British Cinema or those just wanting a really good laugh, this is the film to start with.
    8Anonymous_Maxine

    A classic crime comedy that evidently can't be updated.

    The humor in this movie is not only British, which is notoriously misunderstood by American audiences (and vice versa), which is odd because both the writer and director were American, but it is also now five decades old. Only the best American comedies have lasted anywhere near that long (consider, for example, the sad fate of many of the movies that people thought were really funny in the 80s – Police Academy, anyone?). The reason The Ladykillers has not only survived but has now been remade is because the comedy in it is not only effective, but it is intelligent, and it is very difficult not to be impressed by a comedy with a brain.

    Alec Guinness is in top form as the leader of the gang, whose members reflects criminals of all walks of life. The ingenious plan is to rent out a room from a sweet old lady while they pull off a heist. The comedy, for me, lies in the difference between what is planned and what is played out, particularly in the difficulties that the gang of criminals have in outsmarting a sweet old lady who acts like a grandmother supervising a group of unruly grandchildren.

    The problem that the movie has is that the pace is very slow and much of the comedy has faded over the years, but structurally and intellectually it remains a respectable film, even more now in comparison to its disastrous remake. What went wrong in the remake is that they did not maintain who the character of Mrs. Wilberforce was, because it was the juxtaposition of her as a frail old woman surrounded by toughened criminals that made it funny when things kept going wrong in their plan. In the remake she is replaced by Mrs. Munson, a tough-talking woman who was to be feared from the outset. There is no irony in being overpowered by someone more powerful than yourself from the outset, which I imagine is why the remake also featured Marlon Wayans and a case of irritable bowel syndrome, which I have never seen used in an even remotely amusing way.

    While the original film may be a bit too slow for modern audiences, it is indeed charming the way 87-year-old Mrs. Wilberforce continually foils their carefully thought out plans, many times inadvertently. Alec Guinness is wonderful as the band's leader, wearing outrageous false teeth, nearly rivaling Lon Chaney as the man of a thousand faces, and Peter Sellers is one of the criminals as well. I'm no expert about British comedies or Alec Guinness' early works, but I can certainly tell enough from watching this movie that the Coen Brothers' remake did nothing to impress the British about Hollywood's respect for the classics.
    jmupton2003

    An all time classic that did NOT need a remake!

    I was fortunate that Channel 4 in the UK showed this original classic film at the same time the new remake was about to hit the cinema screens. Many thanks therefore for providing two hours of classic cinema that showed clearly why Americans should not bother with naff remakes.

    A classic ensemble of some of the UK's finest acting talent o the time pull of a heist in the centre of London but when their landlady finds out what they are up to, a bizarre sequence of events leads the gang to turn on each other in a brilliant and amusingly written, directed and produced film.

    Whilst railway nostalgists will be wondering at the vintage footage of steam hauled trains coming out of St Pancras station and goods yard, others will be marvelling at the brilliant characterisations and script that makes this a timeless classic from Ealing studios.

    And then the Americans decide on an Americanised remake – WHY?!? Apparently we are promised [unnecessary] remakes of all of the Ealing comedy classics – can't wait for the Titfield Thunderbolt to be remade with a Class 66 and a 4-VEP then!
    Jeremy-93

    not just the perfect comedy

    One of the Ealing studio's finest achievements, this immensely entertaining crime caper looks at first glance to be pure, inconsequential entertainment. But it doubles as a sly, subtle rummage around the psychology of the respectable, old-fashioned middle classes, with Katie Johnson deserving top billing alongside Alec Guinness (she doesn't get it) for her remarkable turn as the lady in question, the redoubtable Mrs Wilberforce.

    No less than the not-quite-ruthless-enough gang of criminals who scheme in her house, she lives in her own private universe with its own particular rules and values. Though she begins the film as the stereotype of a maddeningly officious pillar of local society, it gradually emerges that there is a freer as well as shrewder spirit locked in there than meets the eye. The umbrella she is always losing (she herself suggests that she unconsciously _wants_ to lose it), the escapologist parrot, and most poignantly the memory of a 21st birthday party interrupted by the end of the Victorian age, all hint at an inner life that the comic plot could easily have done without. The screenplay, deservedly Oscar-nominated, has the genius and economy to provide us with all these hints without ever slowing down a tightly-edited and superbly directed narrative.

    The other characters are a good deal simpler, but Alec Guinness is in impressively seedy form as 'Professor' Marcus and Cecil Parker makes an appealing Major. Peter Sellers and Herbert Lom don't have a great deal to do and don't try to hog the limelight, but there's a nice cameo from Frankie Howerd. Ealing went out on a high.
    acutler

    Great when I was a kid; still great now!

    OK so I like it. Why? Well it is that intoxicating combination of dry black humour, pathos and perhaps a pleasing inevitability that whatever twist the film takes, you know it should be no other way.

    I cannot fault the cast, I regretted as a kid that I did not see Katie Johnson again (I know she made many other films, but I have never collided with them), whereas Alec Guinness and Peter Sellers were often featured on a Saturday Matinee.

    I am, however, pleasantly surprised at how well this film is rated by IMDb! Of course I would give it high marks, but it is very interesting to see how many other people from other nations both 'get it' and appreciate it. It is perhaps, these days, just a gentle farce with black edges where naivety blends in with irony, and I am not claiming that it makes me LoL the whole time. But it is eminently watchable and re-watchable and I would never hesitate to recommend it; indeed those who do not like it would probably not 'get me' either!

    Best Emmys Moments

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    Comedy
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    Crime

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Because Katie Johnson (who played the old lady) was already 76 when she got the role, director Alexander Mackendrick went to the distributor and asked if her name could be prominently above the title, saying that this might be her last movie. The distributor agreed. Two years later, Johnson died. She only made one more movie.
    • Goofs
      When the policeman calls at Mrs. Wilberforce's house, he introduces himself as "Sergeant McDonald". At the end of the film, the Inspector refers to the same character as "Sergeant Harris". In the credits he is simply listed as "Sergeant".
    • Quotes

      Professor Marcus: You're most kind, and if I may say so, you have a very curious and charming house. Such, um, pretty windows.

      Louisa Wilberforce: Oh, thank you,

      Louisa Wilberforce: [pointing to a window] And I rather favour positions...

      Professor Marcus: [interrupting] I always think the windows are the eyes of a house, and didn't someone say the eyes are the windows of the soul?

      Louisa Wilberforce: I don't really know. Oh, it's such a charming thought, I do hope someone expressed it!

    • Crazy credits
      During the opening credits, roses are shown, to highlight the fact that William Rose wrote the screenplay.
    • Connections
      Featured in Tuesday's Documentary: The Ealing Comedies (1970)
    • Soundtracks
      Minuet in E major
      (uncredited)

      Written by Luigi Boccherini, arranged for string ensemble

      [playing on the phonograph whenever the robbers are pretending to be practicing]

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    FAQ22

    • How long is The Ladykillers?Powered by Alexa
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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 3, 1956 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Official site
      • StudioCanal International (France)
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Ladykillers
    • Filming locations
      • Argyle Street, St. Pancras, London, England, UK(view down street from Mrs. Wilberforce's house)
    • Production companies
      • The Rank Organisation
      • Ealing Studios
      • Michael Balcon Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $23,213
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $5,038
      • Jun 6, 2021
    • Gross worldwide
      • $50,276
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 31m(91 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1(original & intended ratio/open matte, theatrical release, director specification)

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