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Treasure Island

Treasure Island

  • Status: Released
  • 19-07-1950
  • Runtime: 96 min
  • Score: 6.589
  • Vote count: 219

Enchanted by the idea of locating treasure buried by Captain Flint, Squire Trelawney, Dr. Livesey and Jim Hawkins charter a sailing voyage to a Caribbean island. Unfortunately, a large number of Flint's old pirate crew are aboard the ship, including Long John Silver.

Bobby Driscoll

Jim Hawkins

Robert Newton

Long John Silver

Basil Sydney

Captain Smollett

Walter Fitzgerald

Squire Trelawney

Denis O'Dea

Dr. Livesy

Finlay Currie

Capt. Billy Bones

Ralph Truman

George Merry

Geoffrey Keen

Israel Hands

Geoffrey Wilkinson

Ben Gunn

John Laurie

Blind Pew

Francis de Wolff

Black Dog

David Davies

Mr. Arrow

John Gregson

Redruth

Andrew Blackett

Gray

William Devlin

Morgan

Howard Douglas

Williams

Harry Locke

Haggott

Sam Kydd

Cady

Stephen Jack

Job

Harold Jamieson

Scully

David Blake Kelly

Bolen

Reginald Drummond

Vane

Gordon Mulholland

Durgin

Patrick Troughton

Roach

Jim Brady

Wolfe

Chris Adcock

Pike

Tom Lucas

Upson

Leo Phillips

Spotts

Eddie Moran

Bart

Bob Head

Tardy

Ken Buckle

Joyce

Paddy Brannigan

Hunter

Jack Arrow

Norton

Freddy Clark

Bray

CinemaSerf

This is a cracking interpretation of Robert Louis Stevenson's tale of a hunt for a legendary treasure on a remote desert island. Robert Newton is superb as the double-dealing, one-legged "Long John Silver" who would betray his own mother if needs be, enlisted by the foolish "Squire Trelawney" to raise a crew to get them to Hispaniola where Flint's treasure is reputedly located. There's a solid effort from the enthusiastic young Bobby Driscoll as "Jim Hawkins", and Basil Sydney, John Gregson and Denis O'Shea complete the complement of "loyal" officers as against a crew riddled with cut-throats. It's a great, colourful, seafaring adventure with it's fair share of twists and turns. It's odd to see Geoffrey Keen ("Israel Hands") as a baddie and John Laurie, Finlay Currie and a super Francis de Wolff all help Byron Haskin's adaptation to be the best of all. "Them's the die'll be the lucky ones!"