Go to Blazes (1962 film)
Go to Blazes | |
---|---|
Directed by | Michael Truman |
Produced by | Kenneth Harper |
Written by |
Patrick Campbell Vivienne Knight |
Starring |
Dave King Robert Morley Daniel Massey Dennis Price |
Music by | John Addison |
Cinematography | Erwin Hillier |
Edited by | Richard Best |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Warner-Pathé Distributors |
Release dates | 1962 |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Go to Blazes is a 1962 British comedy film directed by Michael Truman and starring Dave King, Robert Morley, Norman Rossington, Daniel Massey, Dennis Price, Maggie Smith, David Lodge. It also featured Arthur Lowe and John Le Mesurier, later to feature prominently in Dad's Army.
Plot
Three incompetent criminals steal a fire engine as a getaway vehicle.
Recently released from prison, Bernard, Harry and Alfie have planned the perfect bank robbery, for which they need the perfect getaway. This is the part that let them down last time, hence their prolonged stay at ‘Her Majesty’s Pleasure…’
They have settled on a fire engine as the least likely form of transport that the Police would stop and search. They steal a well maintained working 1930’s fire engine stored in a remote fire station and swap it for a scrap engine of the same type they bought from a junk yard for a few quid. Then they burn down the fire station to hide the theft, leaving the burnt out scrapper in the debris.
Testing their theory, an attempt to rob a jewelers shop ends in disaster. Whilst Harry is dodging the Police as he sizes up the target, Bernard and Alfie with the engine are flagged down by a desperate home-owner (Derek Nimmo) whose basement flat is flooding and mistakes them for the real fire brigade. Their attempts to pump out the flat make matters worse, and they flee the scene with hoses trailing behind them as the real fire engine arrives. Harry’s accidental discovery of a love interest at the same time only adds to the confusion.
Failure only makes them more determined, but they must be more professional and must pass as trained firemen; their obvious incompetence at the flooded flat nearly ruined their plans. Close friend Arson Eddie (Robert Morley) is unable (and unwilling) to help them, as devoted to the ‘sacred flame’ he knows all there is to know about starting fires, but next to nothing about putting them out.
A chance conversation heard outside a fire station puts them onto Withers (Dennis Price), a fire chief dismissed from the service for arson, theft and conduct unbecoming. He is persuaded to train them all in exchange for a share in the proceeds of the bank job.
The robbery takes place with the lads roping in Eddie to provide a fire at the bank as a distraction, intercepting the phone call from the bank to the fire brigade and attending the ‘blaze’ themselves. All goes to plan and the thieves escape with a fire hose stuffed with banknotes.
It is only as they make their getaway that they are flagged down once more and required to join in the fighting of a real fire… undeterred, well equipped, and above all trained, they join in.
It is a pity that Alfie attaches the wrong hose to the pump and covers the scene of the fire with the stolen money.
The film draws to a close with the crooks sitting in the ‘Black Maria’ on the way to their next stay in prison; in the window behind the van a Royal limousine is visible in the distance.
Seeing it, Bernard remarks he has just had another idea for the perfect getaway vehicle…
Cast
- Dave King as Bernard
- Robert Morley as Arson Eddie
- Daniel Massey as Harry
- Dennis Price as Withers
- Coral Browne as Colette
- Norman Rossington as Alfie
- Maggie Smith as Chantal
- Miles Malleson as Salesman
- Wilfrid Lawson as Scrap Dealer
- David Lodge as Sergeant
- John Welsh as Chief Fire Officer
- Finlay Currie as Judge
- James Hayter as Pipe Smoker
- Derek Nimmo as Fish Fancier
- John Glyn-Jones as Fire Chief
- Eynon Evans as Mayor
- Diane Clare as Girl Lover
- Dudley Sutton as Boy Lover
- John Le Mesurier as Fisherman
- John Warwick as Fireman