Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Wings of Danger is a 1952 British second feature [1] crime film directed by Terence Fisher and starring Zachary Scott, Robert Beatty and Kay Kendall. [2] The screenplay, based on the 1951 novel Dead on Course by Trevor Dudley Smith and Packham Webb, [3] concerns a pilot who is suspected of smuggling.
Wings of Danger: April 1, 1952: Terence Fisher : Made in Britain Valley of Eagles: April 25, 1952: Terence Young: Made in Britain Outlaw Women: April 28, 1952:
He was on TV in Tales of Tomorrow (1951) and Betty Crocker Star Matinee (1952) and went to England to make Wings of Danger (1952). In Hollywood, he was in Studio One in Hollywood (1953), and Medallion Theatre (1953) on TV, and Appointment in Honduras (1953), directed by Jacques Tourneur.
Nigel Neilson as Hubert in Time Is My Enemy (1952) Nigel Fraser Neilson (12 December 1919 – 3 June 2000) was a British television and film actor of the 1940s and 50s. Neilson was born in Aldershot in Hampshire in 1919. [1] In 1925 aged 5 he moved to New Zealand [2] but returned to the UK in 1929 with his mother and brother. [3]
The film was still being shown in US movie theatres into the 1960s. For example, it was the second film in a triple feature - between The Black Orchid (1958) and Maracaibo (1959) - at the Mt Lebanon Drive-In in Lebanon PA on 19 July 1963. [8] Two years later, the movie continued to be at the bottom of a double bill.
The Last Page was the first film made under a four-year production and distribution contract between Hammer and the US film distribution company Lippert Pictures.As in all of these films, the leading role was played by a well-known Hollywood actor supplied by Lippert to ensure familiarity with American audiences.
Death of an Angel (1952) Whispering Smith Hits London (US: Whispering Smith vs. Scotland Yard, 1952) The Last Page (US: Man Bait, 1952) Wings of Danger (1952) Never Look Back (1952) Stolen Face (1952) Lady in the Fog (US: Scotland Yard Inspector, 1952) The Gambler and the Lady (1952) The Flanagan Boy (US: Bad Blonde, 1953) Four Sided Triangle ...
In British Sound Films: The Studio Years 1928–1959 David Quinlan rated the film as "mediocre", writing: "Good cast adrift in an archly contrived thriller." [4]The Radio Times Guide to Films gave the film 2/5 stars, writing: "Paul Henreid, that oily smoothie from Casablanca [1942] and Now, Voyager [1942], here washes up in the torrid, tawdry, cheapskate world of the British quota quickie.