Calling All Cars (1954 film) explained

Calling All Cars
Director:Maclean Rogers
Producer:E. J. Fancey
Starring:Spike Milligan
Cardew Robinson
John Fitzgerald
Adrienne Scott
Runtime:43min
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English

Calling All Cars is a 1954 short film directed by Maclean Rogers, starring Cardew Robinson and John Fitzgerald. The film also features Spike Milligan voicing the thoughts of "Freddie", an old taxicab featured in the film.

The film is a mixture of semi-documentary about the port of Dover and a comedy about two young men who decide to chat up two girls and follow them to Dover in an old taxicab.

Cast

Production

The two principal actresses stop for tea, en route to Dover, at the former "Fantail" restaurant building in Locksbottom, Kent.

Critical reception

The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "This second feature wavers curiously between farce and sequences which look as though they were devised to publicise the Dover Harbour car terminal. A fairly lengthy section, accompanied by some painfully facetious cross-talk between Reggie and his friend, deals factually with the construction of the terminal; for the rest, the film provides some remarkably unamusing adventures on the Dover Road."[1]

Chibnall and McFarlane in The British 'B' Film called the film: "a poor man's Genevieve (1953) filmed at the Dover Harbour car terminal."[2]

External links

Notes and References

  1. 1 January 1954 . Calling All Cars . . 21 . 240 . 72 . ProQuest.
  2. Book: Chibnall, Steve . The British 'B' Film . McFarlane . Brian . . 2009 . 978-1-8445-7319-6 . London . 119.