 The Ladykillers (1955)
A
wonderful Ealing comedy with a great performance by British
actress Katie Johnson, then well into her seventies, who plays
Louisa Wilberforce - an old lady whose innocence is more than a
match for a ruthless gang of criminals.
She lives in a tumbledown Victorian house near St Pancras
Station, and takes in as a lodger a strange 'professor' with
prominent dentures (Alec Guinness in one of his most vivid
disguises).
He has four odd friends who visit regularly for the purpose,
she is told, of playing chamber music. In fact they are plotting a
large robbery and intend to use the house as their operational
base
The group is nicely contrasted: Danny Green is a moronic
heavyweight, Cecil Parker an ex-officer confidence trickster type,
Peter Sellers a teddy boy crook and Herbert Lom a ruthless
Soho-foreign gangster.
Inevitably Mrs Wilberforce finds out what they have been up to,
and calmly takes them over as though they are little boys who have
misbehaved in the nursery. They plot to kill her, but cannot agree
who is to perform the deed.
The thieves fall out and each in turn is eliminated, the last
felled by the arm of a railway signal as he disposes of the
penultimate body.

The old lady, finding herself the custodian of a gigantic
amount of used bank-notes, goes along to the local police station
to report it, but the amiable policeman (Jack Warner), who is used
to her fantasies, sends her on her way.
The film ends as she walks home, wondering what to do with
£60,000 and absent-mindedly dropping a pound note to a pavement
artist who has drawn a picture of Winston Churchill.
Screenplay writer William Rose received an Oscar nomination for
his clever script.
The recent Coen Brothers remake transferred the action in time
and space - from Kings Cross, London to the American Deep South -
and scaled up the caper from a mail train to a casino.
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