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The Wrong Box

The Wrong Box

  • Status: Released
  • 19-06-1966
  • Runtime: 105 min
  • Score: 6.5
  • Vote count: 57

In Victorian England, a fortune now depends on which of two brothers outlives the other—or can be made to have seemed to do so.

John Mills

Masterman Finsbury

Ralph Richardson

Joseph Finsbury

Michael Caine

Michael Hubert Gregory Finsbury

Peter Cook

Morris Finsbury

Dudley Moore

John Finsbury

Nanette Newman

Julia Finsbury

Tony Hancock

Detective

Peter Sellers

Doctor Pratt

Cicely Courtneidge

Major Martha

Wilfrid Lawson

Peacock

Thorley Walters

Patience

Gerald Sim

1st Undertaker

Peter Graves

Military Officer

Irene Handl

Mrs. Hackett

Norman Bird

Clergyman

John Le Mesurier

Doctor Slattery

Hilton Edwards

Lawyer

Norman Rossington

1st Rough

Diane Clare

Mercy

Tutte Lemkow

Strangler

Jeremy Lloyd

Brian Allen Harvey

James Villiers

Sydney Whitcombe Sykes

Graham Stark

Ian Scott Fife

Dick Gregory

Leicester Young Fielding

Nicholas Parsons

Alan Frazer Scrope

Willoughby Goddard

James Whyte Wragg

Valentine Dyall

Oliver Pike Harmsworth

Leonard Rossiter

Vyvyan Alistair Montague

Hamilton Dyce

Derek Lloyd Peter Digby

Timothy Bateson

Clerk

Donald Oliver

Gunner Sergeant

Totti Truman Taylor

Lady at Launching

Jeremy Roughton

Bugler

Frank Singuineau

Native Bearer

Michael Lees

Young Digby

Avis Bunnage

Queen Victoria

Gwendolyn Watts

Maidservant

Vanda Godsell

Mrs. Goodge

Marianne Stone

Spinster

John Junkin

1st Engine Driver

Roy Murray

Stoker

Donald Tandy

Ticket Collector

Lionel Gamlin

2nd Engine Driver

Martin Terry

Stoker

Michael Bird

Countryman

George Selway

Railway Vanman

Josef Behrmann

Railway Vanman

Thomas Gallagher

2nd Rough

Charlie Bird

Bonn's Vanmen

Tony Thawnton

2nd Undertaker

Reg Lye

3rd Undertaker

George Spence

Workman in Road

Penny Brahms

Twittering Female on the Moors

Andrea Allan

Girl on Train

David Lodge

Corpse Remover

Juliet Mills

Mannish Woman on Train

André Morell

Club Butler

Maria Kazan

Twittering Female on the Moors

CinemaSerf

Bryan Forbes is to be commended for assembling a glittering cast in this rather plodding adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson's novel. It centres around the fate of a £20,000 fortune - the result of a tontine between 20 families who each invested £1,000 in a lottery than would provide the entire fund for whichever of their young children survived! Over the course of time, nature takes it's course until, sixty years later, we are left with two brothers. "Masterman" (John Mills) and "Joseph" (Sir Ralph Richardson). The former is a conspiring old fellow who really cares about the cash - a feeling shared by his plotting grandson "Michael" (Michael Caine). The latter - who doesn't really care about the cash - a rather charming old buffoon with a tale to tell of just about everything, being kept going for as long as possible by his scheming nephews Peter Cook ("Morris"), Dudley Moore ("John") and charming neice Nanette Newman ("Julia"). The scene is now set for a series of lightly amusing escapades with a few cameos from (policeman) Tony Hancock, (doctor) Peter Sellers and a wonderfully paced (quite literally) effort from Wilfred Lawson as the butler "Peacock" leading to a rather farcical conclusion in a graveyard. It is certainly a great looking film, John Barry provides one of his less distinctive scores and the film really moves along quickly. It just wasn't funny. The impending jokes could be seen from space, and aside from Lawson, and Sir Ralph's nigh on perfect portrayal of the doting old "Joseph", the characters provide more for a star-studded gathering for the sake it it, rather for the cohesiveness of the (admittedly quite fun) plot. Not one of RLS's finest stories, this - it tries to ridicule the "virtues" of 19th century Britain, but this production lacks subtlety, wit to achieve that goal. It really overcooks the perceived eccentricities of the characters - especially with Messrs. Cook and Moore. There was a certain style of comedy and comedian prevailing in the UK in the 1960s - fans of which may get much more from this. As it is, though, I struggled with it.