The Cracksman (1963) Poster

(1963)

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6/10
The little master
Chase_Witherspoon10 November 2012
Gullible master locksmith (Drake) is continually duped into using his lock-picking prowess to commit unsuspecting crimes for the dapper con artist Dennis Price and his shady associates. Judge Geoffrey Keen initially sentences him to one year's probation, but after a number of other ruses in which he's left holding the baby, so to speak, he's incarcerated and quickly earns the respect of fellow inmates for his sleight of hand (albeit inadvertent). But a stint in the big house isn't going to cure his credulity and he's duly enlisted in another scam on his release.

Drake looks like Gordon Jackson in Richard Attenborough's stout frame, and he has great comic timing, playing a character so innocent and optimistic, it's impossible not to form sympathy for his constant exploitation. Percy Herbert co-stars as the gaol-house heavy with whom Drake forms an enduring friendship, and the lovely Nyree Dawn Porter is the refined beauty assigned to seduce Drake into a daring safe-cracking job, organised by heavyweight mobster Eddie Byrne. The impeccable cast also features George Sanders, Dennis Price, Finlay Currie and Neil McCarthy (as Drake's slightly unusual cell-mates), Norman Bird and Ronnie Barker in an audition for "Porridge".

Quite typical of the British comedies of the era (in fact the giant marrow scene could have even been borrowed from "Two-Way Stretch"), with more than a few chuckles (the gaol break to collect bird seed or the balloon scene in which Drake is plied with champagne spring to mind) and if there's a criticism, it's the epic near two-hour duration which could have been far more economical. And sorry to disappoint, though Robert Shaw is credited in this movie on IMDb, and no disrespect intended, it's actually Richard Shaw who plays the minor role of "Moke" in the movie.
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6/10
Genial comedy
Leofwine_draca18 July 2019
Warning: Spoilers
THE CRACKSMAN is a genial comedy of the era and a star vehicle for the diminutive redhead Charlie Drake, who is far less of an annoying presence that I was expecting. He plays a warm and amiable master locksmith who finds himself swindled by a number of devious characters intent on exploiting his skills for their own ends as the film goes on. What's remarkable about this is that the ensemble cast features stalwart turns from familiar face after familiar face, from a pre-PORRIDGE Ronnie Barker as a con (what else?) to a typically slimy Dennis Price, alongside Eddie Byrne and George Sanders as rival gangsters. The film is generally amusing enough, getting by thanks to Drake's hard work for the most part, with some fun scenes of slapstick to recommend it. It gets a bit slow in the second half but picks up for a riotous climax.
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4/10
Too much of a mediocre thing
Ambak9 March 2014
This was Associated Britsh Picture Corporation's third attempt to turn popular television comedian Charlie Drake into a big screen star. To say that this is a notch up on the previous effort (Petticoat Pirates) is not saying much, but at least this is a properly constructed vehicle for Drake rather than a series of irrelevant scenes inserted into an existing story. In this movie Drake actually has a character name and the fact that he is in nearly every scene will either please or appal you depending on your tolerance of the character. The Drake films were clearly intended to be ABPC's answer to Rank's Norman Wisdom films, which had had ten years of box office success but by 1963 were beginning to flag. Unfortunately, public tastes were marching relentlessly on to the swinging sixties and the appetite for sentimental "little man" comedy was on the wane. Even if you are a Charlie Drake fan, the main problem with this effort is the glacial pace. It is at least thirty minutes too long, mainly due to the profusion of slapstick set pieces. As with Petticoat Pirates, ABPC quite unnecessarily shot this in CinemaScope and Technicolor and filled it with familiar British comedy actors including Ronnie Barker having a pre-Porridge spell behind bars and ultra smooth Patrick Cargill trying to play common. If you must watch a Charlie Drake movie, this is probably the best, but that is not much of a recommendation.
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Surprisingly Enjoyable
pwright-210 May 2000
I hadn't seen anything with Charlie Drake since I was a child. This was on TV recently and I watched it out of sheer boredom. Gradually, I got engrossed in it and found that it contained moments of sheer genius.

I think that Charlie Drake is a forgotten comedy hero who beats his contemporaries hands-down when it comes to acting ability.
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3/10
Under Lock & Key
richardchatten20 October 2020
No expense was spared on this lavish big screen vehicle for Charlie Drake, much of it filmed on location around a very wintry-looking London in CinemaScope and Technicolor with a supporting cast (in a nod towards 'The Rebel') headed by George Sanders. None of these blandishments (and certainly Ron Goodwin's galumphing score) made him any funnier, so he soon returned to TV.

Ironically Ronnie Barker's name doesn't even make the opening credits, yet the most enduring feature of the film is the first appearance - fully formed - of Norman Stanley Fletcher looking barely a day younger under an earlier alias and with a scar on his right cheek. Sixteen years later the character would return to the big screen (minus the scar) billed above the title.
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4/10
If a joke doesn't work keep on trying
malcolmgsw14 March 2018
Charlie Drake plays a naif.Every time he is asked to do a job as a cracksman it turns out he is being duped by a crook.Caught by the police he is sent to prison.This is repeated ad nauseum.For some reason they have included a night club scene which could easily have been cut to bring the film down to a more manageable and less boring 90 minutes.To me only 30 seconds of this film retained my interest.That is when Drake is shown in the East Stand of the marvellous art deco palace that was the East Stand Highbury.I reckon the filming must have taken place after the big freeze of 1962/63.Watch the film for this and nothing else.
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8/10
The George & Charlie Show
telegonus1 September 2002
British comedian Charlie Drake is an acquired taste, and at his best as the hapless "cracksman" of the title in this modest little spoof of crime pictures. The script is sharper than one might expect from this kind of film, and little Charlie is up to his ears in trouble. His endearing innocence (if not talent) suggests a contemporary version of Chaplin; while his physical appearance suggests the love child of Ned Beatty and Mickey Rooney, making him wholly appropriate for comedy,--and nothing else. He plays so well with bad guy George Sanders, who really comes to life here, that I can almost imagine them as a comedy team, which sounds ludicrous I know, as they would have seemed so incongruous together, but then again comedy teams generally do,
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10/10
"This Never Happened To James Bond!"
ShadeGrenade20 August 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Whenever a comedian hits the big time on television, the obvious temptation is to try and extend that success by venturing into the cinema. Many have tried and failed, including Morecambe and Wise, Allen and Rossi, Steve Coogan, Ant and Dec and, more recently, Horne and Corden. Charlie Drake was no exception - his previous films - 'Petticoat Pirates' ( 1960 ) and 'Sands Of The Desert' ( 1961 ) failed to set the world alight. Not his fault, of course, it was just that his brand of knockabout slapstick was better suited to the small screen ( it makes me glad there was never a movie version of 'Some Mothers Do Ave Em' ). However, Charlie's third cinematic offering - 'The Cracksman' - unexpectedly turned out a little beauty. He plays 'Ernest Wright', master locksmith per excellence. When Beefeaters get locked out of the Tower of London, its Ernest they turn to for help. A gang of criminals, headed by nightclub owner Domino ( Ed Byrnes ) wants him to steal priceless jewels from a museum. Sensing his incorruptibility, they give him a criminal record by making him the unwitting dupe in a series of robberies.

As you'd expect from a Charlie Drake comedy, there's plenty of slapstick, but also an effective element of pathos - when Wright gets out of prison and his former friends shun him, it is a genuinely moving moment. The gang's plan is a little unbelievable; they seem prepared to wait up to three years for Ernest to steal the jewels, but its done so well you don't really care. George Sanders is his usual smooth self as rival crime boss 'The Guv'nor', while Nyree Dawn Porter shows a real flair for comedy as an undercover policewoman. In addition, the Lew Schwarz and Charlie Drake penned script manages to squeeze in parodies of 'Dr.No' and 'Birdman Of Alcatraz'! The prison scene features Ronnie Barker as a prototype 'Norman Stanley Fletcher'. Finlay Currie, Neil McCarthy, Dennis Price, Wanda Ventham, Norman Bird, and Percy Herbert all add to the fun.

Charlie only made one other film - the somewhat flat 'Mister Ten Per Cent' ( 1966 ), also directed by Peter Graham Scott.

Funniest moment - Ernest sliding down a fireman's pole in his pyjamas. Reaching the bottom, he finds that one leg has got caught round the pole!

Second funniest moment - Ernest knocking out the Guv'nor with a boomerang. He catches it, exclaiming excitedly: "It came back that time!", a reference to the comic's novelty hit 'My Boomerang Won't Come Back'!

A real cracker of a British comedy!
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9/10
A dry funny farce
lawlibrarian28 September 2002
The honest locksmith duped by the crooks only sees the light when he has to open the Tower of London. The cannonball & Bobby are a hoot.

This is an underrated little gem of a film. As long as you like the Pre-Python dry Brit farces.
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