There Was a Crooked Man is a 1960 British comedy film directed by Stuart Burge and starring Norman Wisdom, Alfred Marks, Andrew Cruickshank, Reginald Beckwith, and Susannah York.[2] It is based on the James Bridie play The Golden Legend of Schults, and was one of two films Wisdom made independently to extend his range, (the other being The Girl on the Boat); although according to the BFI Screenonline website, "the cinema public craved only the Gump".[3] The film was on general release in 1960 on the Rank circuit (supported by the documentary Jungle Hell) to less than spectacular business before being withdrawn, allegedly after American objections to Wisdom masquerading as an arrogant US general requisitioning British land for the US Air Force. The subject of US forces on British soil was deemed too sensitive even for comic treatment.
There Was a Crooked Man | |
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Directed by | Stuart Burge |
Screenplay by | Reuben Ship |
Based on | The Golden Legend of Shults 1939 play by James Bridie[1] |
Produced by | John Bryan Albert Fennell |
Starring | Norman Wisdom Alfred Marks Andrew Cruickshank |
Cinematography | Arthur Ibbetson |
Edited by | Peter R. Hunt |
Music by | Kenneth V. Jones |
Production company | Knightsbridge Films |
Distributed by | United Artists Corporation |
Release date | 1960 |
Running time | 107 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
A naive explosives expert is tricked into working for a criminal gang. The title is taken from the poem "There Was a Crooked Man".
The film was commercially unavailable for many years. It had one television screening on ITV, on Boxing Day 1965. Author and Wisdom biographer Richard Dacre wrote in the booklet notes that accompanied the DVD release that he, Wisdom, and Director Stuart Burge were present when the Barbican Centre Cinema, London, presented its next known public screening at a 'Wisdom Weekend', in 1998. Ten years later, 2008, it was shown in Darwen, Lancashire, where location shots had been filmed in 1960.[4] (However, the 'First Day at Work' scenes were filmed at the "Early's of Witney" blanket factory, in Witney, Oxfordshire.[citation needed])
The film was released on DVD on 8 May 2017.[5]
Films directed by Stuart Burge | |
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