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Captain Clegg (U.S. title: Night Creatures [1]) is a 1962 British adventure horror film directed by Peter Graham Scott and starring Peter Cushing, Yvonne Romain, Patrick Allen, and Oliver Reed. [2] It produced by John Temple-Smith for Hammer Film Productions. It is loosely based on the Doctor Syn character created by Russell Thorndike.
Captain Clegg (a.k.a. Night Creatures) Peter Graham Scott: Peter Cushing, Yvonne Romain, Patrick Allen: United Kingdom [4] The Cursed Palace (a.k.a. Al Qasr Malaoon) Hassan Reda: Salah Zulfikar, Mariam Fakhr Eddine: Egypt [5] Carnival of Souls: Herk Harvey: Candace Hilligoss, Frances Feist, Sidney Berger: United States [6] The Blancheville ...
Captain Clegg may refer to: Captain Clegg a character in the Doctor Syn stories; Captain Clegg, a 1962 film by Hammer Films; Captain Clegg & The Night Creatures, a psychobilly band featured in the 2009 film Halloween II
May 24, 1962: Lonely Are the Brave: co-production with Joel Productions: June 13, 1962: Captain Clegg: U.S. distribution of a British film June 14, 1962: That Touch of Mink [N 2] distribution only; co-production with Granley Company, Arwin Productions and Nob Hill Productions Inc. Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture ...
He appeared in the Hammer film Captain Clegg (1962), known in the United States as Night Creatures. Cushing starred as Parson Blyss, the local reverend of an 18th-century English coastal town believed to be hiding his smuggling activities with reports of ghosts. [21] The film was roughly based on the Doctor Syn novels by Russell Thorndike.
A list of films produced in the United Kingdom in 1962 (see 1962 in film): 1962. Title Director Cast ... Captain Clegg: Peter Graham Scott: Peter Cushing, Yvonne ...
Hammer liked Reed and gave him good supporting roles in the swashbuckler The Pirates of Blood River (1962), directed by John Gilling; Captain Clegg (1962), a smugglers tale with Peter Cushing; The Damned (1963), a science fiction film directed by Joseph Losey; Paranoiac (1963), a psycho thriller for director Freddie Francis; and The Scarlet ...
He subsequently appeared in character roles in many films, including Captain Clegg, The Wild Geese, The Sea Wolves, Puppet on a Chain, and Who Dares Wins. [2] He was also the lead actor in the Associated-Rediffusion adventure series Crane (1963–65) and in the BBC1 series Brett (1971).