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The Breaking Point
U.S. release poster
Directed by Lance Comfort
Written by
Produced byPeter Lambert
Starring
Cinematography
Edited by Peter Pitt
Music by Albert Elms
Production
company
Distributed byButcher's Film Service
Release date
  • 20 February 1961 (1961-02-20)
Running time
59 minutes
CountryEngland
LanguageEnglish

The Breaking Point (also known as The Great Armored Car Swindle) is a 1961 second feature [1] British crime film directed by Lance Comfort and starring Peter Reynolds, Dermot Walsh, Joanna Dunham and Lisa Gastoni. [2]

Plot

Eric Winlatter works at a curency printing company. When the company wins a contract to print banknotes for the Middle East state of Lavadore, he is persuaded to help revolutionaries hi-jack the currency shipment. Cherry, his neglected wife, becomes suspicious and tells journalist Robert Wade. Eric is killed when he falls out of the villains' escape plane.

Cast

Critical reception

Kine Weekly said "Taut crime melodrama, unfolded against a convincing London backdrop." [3]

Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "A waste of one of Laurence Meynell's better novels, this trimmed to the bone thriller has little to offer apart from a well-staged gambling party sequence, a speedy climax and some desultory rough-and-tumble." [4]

The Radio Times Guide to Films gave the film 1/5 stars, writing: "If stars were awarded for plot contrivance, this low-budget thriller would be well into double figures. There's a banknote printer with a gambling debt, revolutionaries with a counterfeiting plan, an armed robbery, a bomb, a touch of adultery and a speeding plane finale. Not one character rings true nor is one fragment of the storyline credible." [5]

References

  1. ^ Chibnall, Steve; McFarlane, Brian (2009). The British 'B' Film. London: BFI/ Bloomsbury. p. 244. ISBN  978-1-8445-7319-6.
  2. ^ "The Breaking Point". British Film Institute Collections Search. Retrieved 10 November 2023.
  3. ^ "The Breaking Point". Kine Weekly. 525 (2784): 10. 9 February 1961 – via ProQuest.
  4. ^ "The Breaking Point". Monthly Film Bulletin. 28 (324): 35. 1961 – via ProQuest.
  5. ^ Radio Times Guide to Films (18th ed.). London: Immediate Media Company. 2017. p. 128. ISBN  9780992936440.

External links