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Musical Comedy The Patsy: United States: Send Me No Flowers: United States: A Hard Day's Night: United Kingdom: Nothing But the Best: United Kingdom: Comedy/dark comedy The World of Henry Orient: United States: 1965: Boeing Boeing: United States: Cat Ballou: Jane Fonda Tom Nardini Dwayne Hickman United States: Comedy/Western Dear Brigitte ...
Make Mine Mink is a 1960 British comedy farce film directed by Robert Asher and featuring Terry-Thomas, Athene Seyler, Hattie Jacques and Billie Whitelaw. [2] It was based on the 1958 play Breath of Spring by Peter Coke, and its sequels.
The Russians Are Coming, the Russians Are Coming is a 1966 American comedy film directed and produced by Norman Jewison for United Artists. The satirical story depicts the chaos following the grounding of the Soviet submarine СпруT (“SpruT”, pronounced "sproot" and meaning " octopus ") off a small New England island.
Don't Bother to Knock (U.S. title: Why Bother to Knock) is a 1961 British comedy film directed by Cyril Frankel starring Richard Todd, Nicole Maurey, Elke Sommer, June Thorburn, Rik Battaglia and Judith Anderson. [1] The screenplay is by Denis Cannan and Frederic Gotfurt, based on the 1959 novel of the same name by Clifford Hanley.
Two-Way Stretch, also known as Nothing Barred, is a 1960 British comedy film directed by Robert Day and starring Peter Sellers, Wilfrid Hyde-White, Lionel Jeffries and Bernard Cribbins. [3] The screenplay is by Vivian Cox, John Warren and Len Heath. A group of prisoners plan to break out of jail, commit a robbery, and then break back into their ...
A Touch of Larceny is a 1959 black-and-white comedy film produced by Ivan Foxwell, directed by Guy Hamilton, and starring James Mason, George Sanders and Vera Miles.The film co-stars Harry Andrews, Rachel Gurney and John Le Mesurier, and is based on the 1956 novel The Megstone Plot by Paul Winterton, written under the pseudonym Andrew Garve.
Let's Kill Uncle—also known as Let's Kill Uncle Before Uncle Kills Us [1] —is a 1966 color black comedy [2] film produced and directed by William Castle, about a young boy trapped on an island by his uncle, who is planning to kill him. The boy's only friend is a young girl, who tries to help him.
The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "the fun is always good-humoured and the playing never drops into caricature. In fact a cast which reads like a minor "Who's Who in the Theatre" gets some unusually good opportunities, with James Donald in particular giving a marvellously deadpan obtuseness to the publicity-conscious Colonel of the bomb disposal unit. ...