Trailers & Videos

HD Film Trailer - The Lady and the Bandit 1951
Cast

Louis Hayward
Dick Turpin

Patricia Medina
Joyce Greene

Suzanne Dalbert
Cecile

Tom Tully
Tom King

John Williams
Archbald Puffin

Malú Gatica
Baroness Margaret

Alan Mowbray
Lord Charles Willoughby

Lumsden Hare
Sir Robert Walpole

Barbara Brown
Lady Greene

George Baxter
David Garrick

Ivan Triesault
King George

Norman Leavitt
Hedger

Frank Reicher
Count Eckhardt

Malcolm Keen
Sir Thomas de Veil

Jimmy Aubrey
First Drunk on Steps

Leonard Carey
Jailer

Al Ferguson
Captain

Frank Hagney
Turpin's Hangman

Jock Mahoney
Tavern Troublemaker

Hank Mann
Man Outside Newgate Prison
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Reviews
CinemaSerf
Dick Turpin's is one of those legends that should have fitted nicely with Louis Hayward's style of swashbuckling heroics. Plenty of opportunity to rob the wealthy that travel the as yet un-policed roads of 1730s England. Sadly, though, Ralph Murphy chooses to focus more on the romantic elements of his roguish subject and we are left with a rather slow moving melodrama. After one of his hold-ups, he meets and falls in love with "Joyce" (Patricia Medina), settles down to middle-class inn-keeping for a while before he goes back to his old ways with friend Tom King (Tom Tully). That's when he robs "Lord Willoughby" (Alan Mowbray) and relieves him of a document proving the existence of treason afoot - the price on his head rockets and his jealous friend "Cecile" (Suzanne Dalbert) sets about betraying him too. At times it is quite exciting - his break-neck race to York on "Black Bess", for example - but otherwise this just plods along with neither of the leading ladies having much on-screen charisma, nor dialogue to work with. Mowbray features sparingly as his foe and the direction is just, well, lacking... Hayward does try, but he has lost the glint from his eye and can't carry this all by himself as entertainingly he once could. I hadn't heard of this film before today, but after watching I'm afraid I am not really surprised.
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