A young singer on a train bound for London finds herself among a group of famous musicians and performers.A young singer on a train bound for London finds herself among a group of famous musicians and performers.A young singer on a train bound for London finds herself among a group of famous musicians and performers.
Photos
The King Brothers
- Themselves
- (as The King Bros.)
John Dankworth
- Self
- (as Johnny Dankworth)
Bernie Winters
- Self
- (as Mike & Bernie Winters)
Mike Winters
- Self
- (as Mike & Bernie Winters)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaDiane Todd and Josephine Douglas, Pete Murray and Freddie Mills -described as The Six-Five Special Team- all receive "introducing" credits.
- GoofsOn the train heading to London Johnny Dankworth and his band are playing in the guards van and a few people start dancing including Ann (Diane Todd). At the end of the number she suddenly has a clutch type handbag in her hand.
- Quotes
Finlay Currie: Nerves; a good actor lives with them, a bad actor lives on them
- ConnectionsSpin-off from Six-Five Special (1957)
- SoundtracksThe Six-Five Special
(uncredited)
Written by Julian More and Johnny Johnston
Theme song from the TV series played over main titles
Featured review
The 6.5 Special TV series was the in thing to watch when I was a young teenager and now, I look on that series with slight uneasiness, THIS FILM takes it to new heights of toe-curling embarrassment.
Dear oh dear, oh dear - this is DIRE!!
The only person to come out of this with any credit was Lonnie Donegan, as for the rest - even John Barry trying to look and sing like a hip-cat was laughable and the rest of these so-called pop stars of the day were little better. And who on earth was Desmond Lane? Never heard of him, and then to see teenage girls' mob him as he played his penny whistle takes it to new heights of ridiculousness. I also wonder how we thought a so-called pop band fronted by a man (Don Lang) playing a trombone was with it, is mind numbing.
And I'll completely dismiss the "comedy" routine by Mike and Bernie Winters as words fail me.
Dear oh dear, oh dear - this is DIRE!!
The only person to come out of this with any credit was Lonnie Donegan, as for the rest - even John Barry trying to look and sing like a hip-cat was laughable and the rest of these so-called pop stars of the day were little better. And who on earth was Desmond Lane? Never heard of him, and then to see teenage girls' mob him as he played his penny whistle takes it to new heights of ridiculousness. I also wonder how we thought a so-called pop band fronted by a man (Don Lang) playing a trombone was with it, is mind numbing.
And I'll completely dismiss the "comedy" routine by Mike and Bernie Winters as words fail me.
- Lucy-Lastic
- Jul 2, 2019
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Calling All Cats
- Filming locations
- Alliance Studios, Twickenham, Middlesex, England, UK(studio: made at)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 25 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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