Phineas T. Barnum and friends finance the first flight to the moon but find the task a little above them. They attempt to blast their rocket into orbit from a massive gun barrel built into the side of a Welsh mountain, but money troubles, spies and saboteurs ensure that the plan is doomed before it starts...
Burl Ives
Phineas T. Barnum
Troy Donahue
Gaylord Sullivan
Gert Fröbe
Professor Siegfried von Bulow
Hermione Gingold
Angelica
Lionel Jeffries
Sir Charles Dillworthy
Dennis Price
The Duke of Barset
Daliah Lavi
Madelaine
Stratford Johns
Warrant Officer
Graham Stark
Bertram Grundle
Terry-Thomas
Captain Sir Harry Washington-Smythe
Renate von Holt
Anna Lindstrom
Jimmy Clitheroe
General Tom Thumb
Judy Cornwell
Lady Electra
Joachim Teege
Joachim Bulgeroff
Edward de Souza
Henri
Joan Sterndale-Bennett
Queen Victoria
Allan Cuthbertson
Colonel Scuttling - Scotland Yard Man
Derek Francis
Puddleby
Anthony Woodruff
Announcer
Hugh Walters
Carruthers
Donald Bisset
Jack Flood
Cecil Nash
Chambers
Vernon Hayden
Mr. Brown
John Franklyn
Railway Guard
Harry Brogan
Professor Dingle
Derek Young
French Officer of the Guard
Director
Don Sharp
Story
Harry Alan Towers
Writer
Dave Freeman
February 26, 2023
5
I was rather disappointed with this comedy drama. Despite having a cast of solid and experienced British stalwarts as well as a few visitors from across the pond, it comes across as a sort of hybrid of "Around the World in 80 Days" (1956) and "Mouse on the Moon" (1963) with neither the charm nor the fun of either. It all starts as Queen Victoria manages to destroy the all-electric home of the "Duke of Barset" (Dennis Price) before inaugurating the suspension bridge of acclaimed engineer "Sir Charles Dillworthy" (Lionel Jeffries) right into the gorge it was supposed to span. Meantime, Phineas T. Barnum (Burl Ives) is having similar difficulties with his projects in the US of A, so he flees to Britain where he encounters these aforementioned two gentlemen and together they alight on a plan to build a rocket to the moon. It's never going to be simple - especially as the Duke's business partner is none other than "Sir Henry Washington-Smythe" (Terry-Thomas) so you just know that caddishness in on the horizon as their project lurches from one disaster to another. They've recruited "Prof. von Bulow" (Gert Fròbe) to design the propellent and Troy Donahue ("Gaylord") is going to be daft enough to try and fly the thing. All the ingredients for an enjoyable film are here, but at just shy of two hours it just misfires as ofter as their rocket for far too long before an ending that I found curiously fitting for all concerned. It is too episodic and the story takes an age to get to a stage where the rocket-ship even features. It's just a messy assembly of characters and sub-plots that allows the actors to play their part, but ensures the story lumbers along weakly. Terry-Thomas stands out, but he is just doing what he aways does and the usually reliable Dennis Price features all too sparingly (as does Fröbe) to make much impact on these admittedly colourful and stylish meanderings. To be honest, I was a bit bored by half way through and that didn't really improve.
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$0.00
Revenue:
$0.00