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| caption =
| caption =
| director = [[Maclean Rogers]]
| director = [[Maclean Rogers]]
| producer = [[Ernest G. Roy]]
| producer = Ernest G. Roy
| writer = [[John Creasey]]
| writer = [[John Creasey]]
| starring = [[John Bentley (actor)|John Bentley]]<br>[[Patricia Dainton]]<br>[[Valentine Dyall]]
| starring = [[John Bentley (actor)|John Bentley]]<br>[[Patricia Dainton]]<br>[[Valentine Dyall]]
| cinematography = [[Geoffrey Faithfull]]
| cinematography = [[Geoffrey Faithfull]]
| editing = [[Jim Connock]]
| editing = [[Jim Connock]]
| music =
| music =
| distributor = [[Butcher's Film Service]]
| distributor = Butcher's Film Service
| released = May 1952
| released = May 1952
| runtime = 71 minutes
| runtime = 71 minutes
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* [[Lockwood West]] as Kennedy
* [[Lockwood West]] as Kennedy
* [[Katharine Blake (actress)|Katharine Blake]] as Janet Lord
* [[Katharine Blake (actress)|Katharine Blake]] as Janet Lord
* [[Charles Hawtrey (film actor)|Charles Hawtrey]] as Cashier
* [[Charles Hawtrey (actor)|Charles Hawtrey]] as Cashier
* [[Ian Fleming (actor)|Ian Fleming]] as Doctor Lancaster
* [[Ian Fleming (actor)|Ian Fleming]] as Doctor Lancaster



Revision as of 20:13, 5 February 2012

Hammer the Toff
Directed byMaclean Rogers
Written byJohn Creasey
Produced byErnest G. Roy
StarringJohn Bentley
Patricia Dainton
Valentine Dyall
CinematographyGeoffrey Faithfull
Edited byJim Connock
Distributed byButcher's Film Service
Release date
May 1952
Running time
71 minutes
Country United Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

Hammer the Toff is a 1952 British crime film directed by Maclean Rogers and starring John Bentley and Patricia Dainton. The film was based on the 1947 novel of the same name by John Creasey, the 17th in the series featuring upper-class sleuth Richard Rollison, also known as "The Toff". This film and another Toff adaptation Salute the Toff were shot back-to-back at Nettlefold Studios in the summer of 1951 with identical production credits and many of the same actors. Hammer the Toff was issued to cinemas in May 1952 as the sequel to Salute the Toff. There would be no further entries in the series.

Both Toff films are classed as "missing, believed lost", and both are included on the British Film Institute's "75 Most Wanted" list of missing British feature films.[1]

Plot

On the train to the seaside resort of Brighthaven, Richard Rollison (Bentley) is sharing a carriage with an attractive young lady called Susan Lancaster (Dainton). The journey is rudely interrupted when the window of the carriage is shattered by a barrage of bullets. Richard learns from the shaken Susan that she is on her way to join an uncle on holiday, and offers to escort her safely to her hotel. They learn that her uncle has disappeared, but has left Susan a package. Later, Rollison happens to overhear a pair of shady characters discussing how to kidnap Susan. She explains that her uncle has developed a secret formula which sinister characters are keen to get their hands on, and they have been receiving threats of menace, hence the flight to Brighthaven.

Rollison consults his old colleague Inspector Grice of Scotland Yard, who tells him that the evidence is pointing in the direction of a particular man as being responsible for the abduction. Using his friends and contacts in the East End, Rollison investigates, while Susan is being kidnapped and tied up. Rollison finally succeeds in identifying the criminals and their leader "The Hammer", releasing Susan and proving that the man suspected by the police is innocent.

Reception

Like its predecessor, Hammer the Toff was well-received by critics as good quality popular B-movie entertainment. Kine Weekly described it as "well staged, with a bright line in dialogue, and neat crime angles", while the Daily Film Renter termed it "lively, easily-assimilated strong-arm stuff with a whiff of comedy and a dash of romance".[1]

Cast

References

  1. ^ a b 75 Most Wanted - Hammer the Toff BFI National Archive. Retrieved 18-10-2010