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The Moonraker

The Moonraker

  • Status: Released
  • 02-08-1958
  • Runtime: 82 min
  • Score: 6.75
  • Vote count: 8

After the battle of Worcester at the end of the Civil War, the main aim of Oliver Cromwell's Commonwealth is to capture Charles Stuart. The future king's escape depends on the intrepid Earl of Dawlish, who as the Moonraker has already spirited away many Royalists. Dawlish travels to the Windwhistle Inn on the south coast to prepare the escape, where he meets Anne Wyndham, the fiancée of a top Roundhead colonel.

George Baker

Anthony, Earl of Dawlish/The Moonraker

Sylvia Syms

Anne Wyndham

Marius Goring

Colonel John Beaumont

Peter Arne

Major Gregg/Edmund Tyler

Clive Morton

Lord Harcourt

Gary Raymond

Charles Stuart

Richard Leech

Henry Strangeways

Iris Russell

Judith Strangeways

Michael Anderson Jr.

Martin Strangeways

Paul Whitsun-Jones

Parfitt

John Le Mesurier

Cromwell

Patrick Troughton

Captain Wilcox

Julian Somers

Captain Foster

Sylvia Bidmead

Meg

Patrick Waddington

Lord Dorset

Fanny Rowe

Lady Dorset

George Woodbridge

Captain Lowry

Leslie Linder

Trooper Bell

Jennifer Browne

Henrietta Dorset

CinemaSerf

I always enjoyed this adventure yarn when I was a kid, and despite George Baker being about as wooden as a picket fence, I think it’s still an entertaining Cavalier/Roundhead story. With King Charles I now dead, the forces of the Commonwealth are focussing on catching his heir, the new King Charles II who is being helped by a few loyal royalists to make it to the safety of France. Hot on his heels, though, are the tenacious “Col. Beaumont” (Marius Goring) and the master of disguises “Maj, Greig”. We know all along who the mysterious “Moonraker” is, and for the next eighty minutes we follow his escapades as he tries to smuggle his very valuable cargo out of harms way. It all comes to an head in a seaside inn where a coach party are gathered and where you just know the swords are going to be flourishing. Sylvia Syms, whose “Anne” just happens to be the fiancée of the pursuing Colonel is also amongst their number, though her role is reduced to one of a rather simpering character and there is a great deal of script for us to wade through here but Paul Whitsun-Jones raises his game as the amiably pompous “Parfitt” who manages to make “nincompoop” sound a great deal nastier than we are used to. It moves along nicely with plenty happening until an exciting cliff top denouement that might have come from Daphné du Maurier, and if you like your derring-do done Hammer style, then you ought to like this. I did.