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Mister 880
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Mister 880

It's the picture everybody is cheering !
71
User Score35 ratings
TMDB 7.116+19501h 30mEnglish
ComedyCrimeRomance

Synopsis

The Skipper is a charming old man loved by all his neighbors. What they don't know is that he is also Mr. 880, an amateurish counterfeiter who has amazingly managed to elude the Secret Service for 20 years.

Director
Edmund GouldingFrom TMDB credits
Studio
20th Century Fox1 production companies
Release
September 29, 1950Released
Box Office

Top Cast

8 of 60
Burt Lancaster
Burt Lancaster
Steve Buchanan
Dorothy McGuire
Dorothy McGuire
Ann Winslow
Edmund Gwenn
Edmund Gwenn
William "Skipper" Miller
Millard Mitchell
Millard Mitchell
"Mac" McIntire
Minor Watson
Minor Watson
Judge O'Neil
Howard St. John
Howard St. John
Chief
Hugh Sanders
Hugh Sanders
Thad Mitchell
James Millican
James Millican
Olie Johnson

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
CinemaSerf
Dec 31, 2024

We start with the usual rousing speech about just how the brave Secret Service is at the vanguard when it comes to thwarting American counterfeiters. One person has been successfully eluding them for years, though, and in a last ditch effort they draft in "Steve" (Burt Lancaster). Now we are fully aware of just whom the forger is, and are actively encouraged to engage with this gentle and kindly fellow (Edmund Gwenn) as his very lack of science - and shocking spelling - make him virtually impossible to trace. Almost immediately this intrepid agent gets onto the trail via a dodgy dollar note that introduces him to "Ann" (Dorothy Maguire) who just happens to live downstairs from our crook. From now on in, there's a confusing inevitability to the story. Confusing because the story can't decide whether it's a romance between Lancaster and Maguire or a gentle crime drama centred around the old man. It's in that muddle that the film rather loses it's way as it manoeuvres itself into an all too cheesy and sentimental cul-de-sac. Gwenn's "Skipper" is a charming old chap whom it would be nigh-on impossible not to like, and his portrayal is simple and effective. The rest of this is really just a soapy accompaniment to that effort and with coincidence taking just a little too prominent a role in the story it's maybe a bit weak. Still, it has a charm to it and it does raise the question of what to to do when faced with what is really a truly victimless crime.

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