THE SIX MEN is a low rent British crime film that suffers from a lack of incident and characters that you can't really warm to. It does benefit from an atypical storyline in which the six members of a criminal gang are the protagonists and the film follows their misadventures as they find themselves captured and carted off to jail one by one.
There's some mild suspense raised as to who the mysterious figure is who is orchestrating the arrests, but to be fair it's never really that gripping and you could turn this off ten minutes before the end and be forever none the wiser without too much bother (the eventual resolution is hurried and makes you shrug your shoulders in response). THE SIX MEN is the kind of film to keep you watching but it's something you'll forget about too shortly afterwards. The cast is undistinguished and lacks the usual familiar faces from the era. The only bits I really enjoyed were the goofy, randomly-inserted scenes of humour involving the bumbling detective who gets his stick trapped in the grill and suffers other indignities as the running time goes on.