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Inspector Hornleigh Goes to It

Inspector Hornleigh Goes to It (1941)

May. 17,1941
|
6.7
| Crime

Third and final film in the 'Inspector Hornleigh’ series of comedy-thrillers. Inspector Hornleigh (Gordon Harker), disappointed at not being handed an important spy case, is assigned by Scotland Yard to an army barracks to investigate the mundane thefts of supplies from the stores. This accidentally leads Hornleigh and Sergeant Bingham (Alastair Sim) to a nest of fifth columnists when his dim-witted assistant carelessly talks to a girl in the cafeteria – and that night, news of Hornleigh and Bingham’s arrival is embarrassingly transmitted back to Germany.

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Stometer
1941/05/17

Save your money for something good and enjoyable

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Tetrady
1941/05/18

not as good as all the hype

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Afouotos
1941/05/19

Although it has its amusing moments, in eneral the plot does not convince.

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Griff Lees
1941/05/20

Very good movie overall, highly recommended. Most of the negative reviews don't have any merit and are all pollitically based. Give this movie a chance at least, and it might give you a different perspective.

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hwg1957-102-265704
1941/05/21

The third Inspector Hornleigh film is not up the standards of the previous two films, partly as it is now set in wartime and involves fifth columnists rather than being a straightforward mystery. The early part where Hornleigh and Sergeant Bingham go undercover in the army is dull but once the first murder occurs it picks up steam until the mail train climax. The humour is still there but story is not as gripping as the first two films.Harker and Sim do enact Hornleigh and Bingham like seasoned performers and play off each other peerlessly. Phyllis Calvert and Edward Chapman are wasted but reliable players like Raymond Huntley, Wally Patch,Betty Jardine and Bill Shine are effortlessly watchable. The great Cyril Cusack plays an early role as a postal worker.There is a framing device to the film in which Inspector Hornleigh dictates his memoirs to Sergeant Bingham which gives a feeling of rounding of this series of films. It's a shame there were no more done.

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Charlot47
1941/05/22

Let me join other reviewers in praising this fast-paced and witty thriller featuring strong characters. Scotland Yard, rather than a hive of ruthless efficiency, is populated by posturing egomaniacs, yet Gordon Harker and Alastair Sim get their man (and his very glamorous sidekick) in the end. While their time in the Army may drag a bit nowadays, then it was part of the nation's collective experience and a suitable case for affectionate satire. Once our pair are on the trail of the spies, things move faster and the other settings of creepy dentist's house, eccentric boarding school, country hotel and final mail train are all well evoked. Enjoyable double entendre abounds whenever Sim encounters a good-looking woman. My favourite is Phyllis Calvert as the dentist's apparent widow, who promises him she will hide nothing as she takes off her cloak and puts her décolletage under his nose. When shortly after that she disappears with the contents of the murdered dentist's safe, it is handy for her that Sim had previously disabled the alarm.So many characters to applaud that I'll just give a special mention to Raymond Huntly for relentless sneering as principal villain: it takes a real professional to keep it up.

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MartinHafer
1941/05/23

This film, "Mail Train", is also known as "Inspector Hornleigh Goes to It". The Inspector (Gordon Harker) is a very talented but very serf-assured member of Scotland Yard. Through much of the film you doubt his competence (since he's so self-assured you can't but think he's a bumbler), but through the course of the film he proves himself to be a very capable and intelligent officer. He is assisted by Sergeant Bingham (Alastair Sim)--a more bumbling sidekick I cannot recall! The film begins with the two being assigned to a rather dull case involving tracking down missing supplies from the army--stuff that's gone missing and probably found its way to the black market. However, along the way the case diverges to a ring of so-called 'fifth columnists'--spies working for the Nazis. At this point in the film, Hornleigh uses his wits and through some good detective work is able to learn about an ingenious German method for smuggling information out of the country. About that time, bumbling Bingham is captured by the enemy and Hornleigh rises to the occasion--in a rousing ending to this exciting film."Mail Train" rather surprised me. At first, I wasn't all that impressed by the film but through the course of it, good writing, an excellent mystery and a nice blend of comedy (Sim) and action made this a very good WWII propaganda film. Very nice....I just hope I can find copies of the other two Hornleigh films Gordon Harker made.

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nova-63
1941/05/24

Like the other films in the Hornleigh series this is breezy with a nice touch of humor. The plot has Hornleigh working for the British army to find out who has been pilfering army supplies. He finds this work beneath his talents and is glad to shift his interest to a case involving the radio transmission of messages by German spies in England. The radio transmission is sent from a different location each time and Hornleigh digs to finds out how they are doing it and who is behind it. The joy of the film is the teaming of Harker and Sim. A first rate team from British film history.

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