The Gelignite Gang
The Gelignite Gang
| 20 June 1956 (USA)
The Gelignite Gang Trailers

A tense thriller that tears the lid off Soho's underworld and reveals the cunning organization behind a gang of safe-breakers who will stop at nothing, not even murder, to achieve their goals.

Reviews
boblipton

Anglo-American Investigations consists of Wayne Morris, Patrick Holt and secretary Sandra Dorne, whom both of the men are trying to date. An insurance company has hired them to investigate a gang of jewel thieves who like to blow open safes. Some one who calls in a tip for a two-thousand-pound reward gets shot just before he can say anything useful.This is a pretty good movie -- at least until the final twist -- as we get to watch Morris, Miss Dorne and the police investigate, each on a separate track. We also watch James Kenney and his interactions with a pawn-shop man. All roads lead to the same place, with some nice clues scattered for the observant viewer.The Brighton setting also helps. Although the movie never rises above Quota Quickie (or American B; it was released simultaneously in both markets) level, the competent acting by all hands makes this watchable throughout.

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Leofwine_draca

THE GELIGNITE GANG is a fast-paced British B-picture from prolific director Francis Searle, who made tons of these low budget quota quickies for a couple of decades from the 1940s to the 1960s. The fun title hints at the plot of a sometimes intense cops-and-robbers flick in which an American insurance investigator helps police to search for members of a criminal gang who use explosives to commit their robberies.Unlike a lot of similar fare from Butcher's Films and the like, THE GELIGNITE GANG doesn't hang around and offers plenty of incident to keep viewers engaged. The imported American star, Wayne Morris, blusters his way through a cast of well-drawn characters, including a young thief whose run-ins with the gang lead to his eventual downfall. The film cleverly plays up a murder mystery angle to the story, keeping you guessing as to the identity of the chief villain, while at the same time keeping the action and suspense bubbling along. It's a B-picture throughout, but a good one.

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jamesraeburn2003

A private investigator called Jimmy Baxter (Wayne Morris) of Anglo American Investigations is on the trail of a gang of ruthless safe breakers known as The Gelignite Gang. They are lead by the mysterious Mr G but his identity is a closely guarded secret and even the foot soldiers who do all his dirty work have no idea who he is. Baxter visits The Green Dragon Club in Soho, which is managed by the shifty Popoulos (Eric Pohlmann) who is switched on about London's underworld. He warns Baxter to drop the case using little hints like "You like to live pleasantly, how would you like to go on living pleasantly?" Baxter's firm has put up a two-thousand-pound reward for information about the gang and later that day, Barton (Monti DeLyle), the head waiter at The Green Dragon Club enters a call box and calls Baxter to tip him off about the gang. But before he can say anything he is shot dead. That night, Baxter takes his young secretary, Sally Morton (Sandra Dorne), to the club for dinner. When he leaves Popoulos says "I hear that the South of France is very nice at this time year" as another hint to suggest that he should back off. When Baxter arrives home we see a hoodlum in a phone box taking instructions from his boss, "..just enough to make him want to take a holiday, right" and the private detective narrowly avoids being clobbered outside his flat. As a result of this incident and a visit from Popoulos, Baxter's boss, Mark Rutherford (Patrick Holt), tries to take Baxter off the case but he refuses vowing to go it alone. In addition, Popoulos has arranged to have one of his men follow Baxter everywhere he goes. Meanwhile, Hartford's jewellers where Sally happens to be having alterations made to a ring, have just taken on Lady Wilshaw's ten-thousand-pound diamond tiara to have the stones reset while she takes a holiday in the South of France and the young assistant at the shop, Chapman, a gambler heavily in debt, seems inordinately interested in its value. It transpires that Chapman has been using items of value from the shop to pawn when he has been in financial trouble. He visits Scobie (Arthur Young), a local pawnbroker, whom he does business with and tells him about Lady Wilshaw's diamond tiara and its considerable value. Hartford's is then raided by the gang and a watchman is shot dead. Sally turns detective when she spots something suspicious about a seemingly harmless band of busking musicians playing in the street near the jewellery shop. She follows them and sees the musicians go into Scobie's shop. Sally goes in on the pretext of pawning her watch but Scobie is not fooled and has one of his thugs follow her. Meanwhile, Chapman, in the hope of getting some money approaches Baxter with information on the gang. They are interrupted by an excited Sally who tells Baxter everything in young Chapman's presence. Chapman tries to blackmail Scobie for a thousand pounds but the pawnbroker shoots him. Baxter phones the police informing them that the gang are in the pawnbrokers shop. When the gang realise that the police have been tipped off they set fire to the shop and flee while Scobie has already taken the money and fled leaving his accomplices to take the blame. But who is the elusive Mr G? Is it Popoulos who seems to be informed about everything connected with Baxter's investigations or is it somebody who Baxter would least have suspected?A highly enjoyable British b-pic crime thriller from director Francis Searle who made scores of these low budget quota quickies from the late forties right up until their demise in the early sixties. One of this film's greatest strengths is Brandon Fleming's screenplay, which actually succeeds in transcending a formulaic plot by keeping you guessing and guessing wrongly as to the identity of Mr G right up until the climax where it delivers a genuinely surprising twist in the tale. No I will not give it away but I shall confine myself to say that who I thought was Mr G turned out not to be. There is an amusing set piece in which the gang take to the streets posing as busking musicians in the vicinity of the jewellery shop raid. In order to alert their accomplices of any danger they change their tempo from slow to fast and from fast to slow again when the danger has passed signifying that all is clear. Performances are good from the entire cast and trivia buffs will recognise Eric Pohlmann, the guy who voiced the unseen Ernst Stavro Blofeld in the early James Bond movies. Wayne Morris as the dogged private eye is the imported American leading man, which was common practice in b-pics to improve their chances of getting distribution in the States. If the film is let down it is by the rather uninspired direction that shows especially in the action scenes such as the shoot out at the pawnbrokers shop, which fails to generate much in the way of suspense. The other bad point is the appalling club number, Soho Mambo, sung by Simone Silva at The Green Dragon Club. There is a cracking moment here where Chapman's girlfriend applauds loudly at the end with cries of "bravo". Chapman stops her saying "Not so loud people will hear" and one wonders if that was out of embarrassment of sitting with somebody who would applaud to such a poor song. But those faults aside, The Gelignite Gang, is still streets ahead of many other British b-pics (and there were lots of them in those days) and if you get the opportunity to see it, it is certainly worth the trouble.

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last-picture-show

This starts off slowly but gradually builds into a neat, satisfactory thriller. A notorious gang are cracking safes across London and an insurance company has put up a £2,000 reward for any information. One of the investigators, Baxter (Wayne Morris), tries to gain information from an underworld contact Mr Popoulus (or as Baxter insists on calling him 'Mr 'Populace') which proves to be a red herring. Meanwhile Baxter's girlfriend and secretary, Sally Morton (the excellent Sandra Dorne, proving that there was more to her than gangster's molls and good-time girls) uncovers some clues to the gang's identity when she spots a street band playing outside the jeweller's workshop that's just been robbed. This eventually leads to a back street pawnbroker who appears to be operating the gelignite gang but the identity of the real 'Mr G' isn't revealed until a gripping climax in a warehouse at the docks. A sub plot involving a young jeweller's assistant borrowing items from his employers to pawn for cash distracts from the central story but it all develops quite realistically. There are some dodgy moments however such as the scene where Baxter asks his secretary on a date by dictating it to her as a letter, and there is the obligatory night club sequence with the song 'Soho Mambo' (which is as bad as it sounds) sung by now-forgotten model/actress Simone Silva who died tragically a few years later from a stroke at the age of 29. Also it's unrealistic that the street-wise jewelery clerk Chapman (James Kenney) is willing to tell all he knows about the robbery to Baxter for a mere fiver when the reward was £2,000. The credits reveal the film was made in 1954 at The Brighton Film Studios (not in Southall) and so presumably on location in Brighton.

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