After one of his hold-ups, Dick Turpin (Louis Hayward) meets and falls in love with "Joyce" (Patricia Medina), settles down to inn-keeping for a while before going back to his old ways. 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.
Louis Hayward is my favourite swashbuckler, the most aristocratic one with a glint in the eye and an abundance of style and wit and nifty movement with an epee, however he looks tired here and there's not so much a glint in the eye- perhaps because he's playing a highwayman and not a "hero". Still he's performs well enough as the man who is trapped in the life of crime and can't come out of it and the plot keeps thing boiling along. There's some moments of excitement- shootouts, galloping horses and coaches - before lapsing into melodrama and chatter. Patricia Medina gets the heart palpitating.