An old dear who's worked at an office for years handling large sums of cash gets a gang of robbers to blow the safe.An old dear who's worked at an office for years handling large sums of cash gets a gang of robbers to blow the safe.An old dear who's worked at an office for years handling large sums of cash gets a gang of robbers to blow the safe.
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Hope springs eternal.
Record from Talking Pictures TV in 2025.
A Taste of Money is a 1960 British comedy film directed by Max Varnel and starring Jean Cadell, Dick Emery and Pete Murray.
It is in colour which is unusual for the time.
This is not a comedy.
Yes, it is whimsical and light viewing for the most part but this has Dick Emery playing it straight as a local criminal heavy.
An elderly spinster who works as a cashier for an insurance company plots to rob her employers by concocting the perfect crime just before she takes retirement.
The last 20 minutes jarred. It became a bit heavy and and dark.
A Taste of Money is a 1960 British comedy film directed by Max Varnel and starring Jean Cadell, Dick Emery and Pete Murray.
It is in colour which is unusual for the time.
This is not a comedy.
Yes, it is whimsical and light viewing for the most part but this has Dick Emery playing it straight as a local criminal heavy.
An elderly spinster who works as a cashier for an insurance company plots to rob her employers by concocting the perfect crime just before she takes retirement.
The last 20 minutes jarred. It became a bit heavy and and dark.
British B movie at its best
This was a pleasant British B movie that was billed as a comedy which was a bit fanciful,but there were enough incidents to make you chuckle along the way.
Jean Cadell( her son being Simon Cadell)stole the show as criminal mastermind despite being well over 70, and it was nice to see Pete Murray who went on to work for Radio Luxembourg for £15 per week and not fulfill his real ambition to being a serious actor despite giving "performance of the Year" titles in America alongside Marlon Brando. Well worth watching and it's even in colour which was unusual at that time.
Jean Cadell( her son being Simon Cadell)stole the show as criminal mastermind despite being well over 70, and it was nice to see Pete Murray who went on to work for Radio Luxembourg for £15 per week and not fulfill his real ambition to being a serious actor despite giving "performance of the Year" titles in America alongside Marlon Brando. Well worth watching and it's even in colour which was unusual at that time.
The Ladykillers in reverse?
Despite a central role for Dick Emery, this is not so much a crime-comedy (as billed) but more of a crime-drama. The 'comedy' that does exist here is not in the form of jokes or slapstick but more in the general spectacle of this unassuming old lady who, at the cusp of her retirement, decides to mastermind a robbery.
Her early scene in the sleazy, den-of-thieves nightclub where she drinks three zombies (cocktails) is comic enough without needing jokes. It's played straight and is the better for it. Dick Emery also plays his gangster role straight which works well, he could easily have played more roles like this.
The ensuing crime as it unfolds is engaging to watch, despite having obvious cracks and flaws that the viewer can see coming a mile off, this is no Agatha Christie. But it's a cut above the usual fodder that the Danziger brothers churned out in this period and made even more watchable for being in technicolor.
It also boasts the introduction of Christine Gregg who's character courts that of actor Pete Murray (who just turned 100). Also features an early appearance from actor Anton Rodgers.
Overall it is a fairly basic crime plot, more like a TV episode than a feature film but there is an extra quality to it - almost like an episode of Tales of the Unexpected. To see this old lady so steeped in the unlikely criminal underworld gives it a feel of The Ladykillers, albeit from a near opposite angle.
If you enjoyed that or, say, the 1966 movie 'Who Killed the Cat' then you would most likely enjoy this too.
Her early scene in the sleazy, den-of-thieves nightclub where she drinks three zombies (cocktails) is comic enough without needing jokes. It's played straight and is the better for it. Dick Emery also plays his gangster role straight which works well, he could easily have played more roles like this.
The ensuing crime as it unfolds is engaging to watch, despite having obvious cracks and flaws that the viewer can see coming a mile off, this is no Agatha Christie. But it's a cut above the usual fodder that the Danziger brothers churned out in this period and made even more watchable for being in technicolor.
It also boasts the introduction of Christine Gregg who's character courts that of actor Pete Murray (who just turned 100). Also features an early appearance from actor Anton Rodgers.
Overall it is a fairly basic crime plot, more like a TV episode than a feature film but there is an extra quality to it - almost like an episode of Tales of the Unexpected. To see this old lady so steeped in the unlikely criminal underworld gives it a feel of The Ladykillers, albeit from a near opposite angle.
If you enjoyed that or, say, the 1966 movie 'Who Killed the Cat' then you would most likely enjoy this too.
A comedy without many laughs
A strange little film, almost like THE LADYKILLERS in reverse. The story follows a little old woman who's had something of a late life crisis and decides to become a bank robber, enlisting some other thieves to assist her in the pursuit. The film's a comedy but other than in the funny extended opening scene which has the old lady getting progressively drunker in a cafe, there are few laughs here. Dick Emergy bags a straight villain role and the rest sort of meanders along to an old-fashioned climax.
Did you know
- TriviaObligatory rear view mirror in robbers' Ford Zephyr missing or present depending on scene and camera viewpoint.
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 11m(71 min)
- Sound mix
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