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Too Many Crooks
Overlook Pick

Too Many Crooks

Robbery With Laughter! Crime Was Simple To Them - They Were All Simple Minded!
74
User Score23 ratings
TMDB 7.416+19591h 27mEnglish
Comedy

Synopsis

Accident-prone Fingers runs a pretty unsuccessful gang. They try and rob wealthy but tricky Billy Gordon - who distrusts banks and fears the Inland Revenue - but he sees Fingers and the boys off. So they decide to kidnap his daughter, only to end up with his wife Lucy. Gordon makes out he couldn't be more pleased, spuring Lucy to take charge of the hopeless bunch of villains.

Director
Mario ZampiFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Release
March 8, 1959Released
Box Office

Top Cast

8 of 35
Terry-Thomas
Terry-Thomas
Billy Gordon
George Cole
George Cole
Fingers
Brenda De Banzie
Brenda De Banzie
Lucy Gordon
Bernard Bresslaw
Bernard Bresslaw
Snowdrop
Joe Melia
Joe Melia
Whisper
Sidney James
Sidney James
Sid
Vera Day
Vera Day
Charmaine
Delphi Lawrence
Delphi Lawrence
Beryl

Trailers & Photos

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Reviews

From TMDB users
John Chard
Sep 6, 2014

The house of Ealing delivers another rewarding comedy. A group of bumbling crooks led by the accident prone Fingers, fail in their attempt to rob mega rich miser Billy Gordon, they reconvene to hatch a plan where they will kidnap Gordon's daughter and hold her to ransom. But instead of kidnapping the pretty daughter they mistakingly in the night snatch the wife Lucy, who upon finding out that Billy is not prepared to pay to get her back, plots her revenge with the aid of her captors. That this film is above average is purely down to its fine cast list, carry on stalwarts Sid James & Bernard Bresslaw join George Cole to form the nucleus of the lovable rogue gang. Taking in his stride the role of playboy scallywag miser Billy, is Terry-Thomas, who gives his usual masterful show of devilish twitches and one line gruff deliveries. Taking lead female duties is the always wonderful Brenda De Banzie as Lucy Gordon, and on reflection she is the glue that binds the picture together. Some wonderful scenes in this one linger long in the memory, the bumbled kidnap by way of a fake funeral is simply marvellous, but par for the course is that Thomas invariably steals the show with a series of great sequences. Witness his repeated attempts at recovering his hidden loot from a burning house, and his appearance in court in front of the ever incredulous John Le Mesurier. Too Many Crooks delivers for those after a good honest British comedy backed up by a sterling cast who know what it takes to make the Michael Pertwee screenplay work. 7/10

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