Dick Barton: Special Agent

Dick Barton: Special Agent (released in the USA as Dick Barton, Detective) is a 1948 British spy film about special agent Dick Barton adapted from the hugely popular radio drama of the same name produced and directed by Raymond Raikes.[1] It was the first of three films that Hammer Film Productions made about the British agent, followed by Dick Barton at Bay and Dick Barton Strikes Back.[2]

Dick Barton: Special Agent
Opening title
Directed byAlfred J. Goulding
Written byAlfred J. Goulding
Alan Stranks
Based onthe BBC radio serial
Produced byHenry Halstead
StarringDon Stannard
George Ford
CinematographyStanley Clinton
Edited byEta Simpson
Music byJohn Bath
Production
company
Distributed byExclusive Films
Release date
10 May 1948
Running time
71 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

Plot

Dick Barton (Don Stannard) and his colleagues Snowy and Jock are investigating smuggling when attempts are made on his life. It turns out there is a neo-Nazi plot to contaminate Great Britain's water supply.

Cast

  • Don Stannard as Dick Barton
  • George Ford as Snowey
  • Jack Shaw as Jock
  • Gillian Maude as Jean
  • Beatrice Kane as Mrs Horrock
  • Ivor Danvers as Snub
  • Geoffrey Wincott as Dr Caspar
  • Arthur Bush as Schuler
  • Alec Ross as Tony

Release

Though critically unpopular, the film's commercial success prompted Hammer to make a number of movies based on radio and/or TV shows. It was released in the USA as Dick Barton, Detective.[3][4]

Critical reception

Sky Cinema noted "schoolboy shenanigans from slick Dick and his (badly miscast) aides Jock and Snowy. More laugh-a-minute than thrill-a-minute, this was British 'B'-film making at its grimmest".[5] DVD Talk wrote "the picture has an Ed Wood-like ineptitude",[6] while Allmovie blamed "too much comic relief and terrible pacing".[2]

References

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