The Six Men (1951) Poster

(1951)

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6/10
"I know the face,but....."
ianlouisiana3 August 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Peter Bull's various memoirs are well worth tracking down,in particular the above - titled which covers the era when "The six men" was shot. Not much sign of the outburst of artistic creativity(Dome of Discovery,The Skylon,Festival Hall etc) that occurred during the contemporary "Festival Of Britain" is on show in this film unfortunately. It's dark and gloomy post - war England that comes through. Seedy clubs,obligatory exiled Chicago gangster,shoulder pads,Cagney hats and "You dirty rat...!"is the limit of the insults thrown. Public School coppers range from the Silly Ass to the deadly determined. "The six men" has very little to do with real life and looks as if it was made for one and ninepence on a cloudy Thursday morning. And the pianist in the bar is the worst I ever remember hearing,live or dead.His efforts at boogie woogie defy belief. The story is absolutely silly,the acting perfunctory,and yet absurdly,I rather enjoyed it. It has survived 65 years or more and remains as an exemplar of what the cheapo end of the British Cinema Industry was knocking out in large numbers to an uncritical public smoking their "Weights" and listening to "Dick Barton - Special Agent" on their wireless.
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6/10
To catch a thief
malcolmgsw13 December 2015
Warning: Spoilers
This is a very engaging and entertaining crime film.Peter Bull is the leader of a gang of thieves who have inflicted a spate of robberies on London,which the police seem helpless to stop.Then all of a sudden the tables are turned.So that one by one the criminals are caught.The common thread is that they are all set up for their downfall by a mysterious person.All of them are arrested for different crimes,such as passing off forged notes that they are encouraged to steal.By the time it gets down to two they each think it's the other but of course it's not.The mole is rather unlikely,but that is just a small quibble.Definitely more than just a tonne filler.
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5/10
Low rent British crime with added random humour
Leofwine_draca14 August 2016
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.
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5/10
Piano afficianados
simonsynologynas3 April 2021
If you like blues piano there are some good close-up shots on the bar scenes.
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5/10
Pleasant Enough Quota Quickie
boblipton21 April 2023
A group of six villains led by Mastermind Peter Bull has been baffling Scotland Yard for years. However, someone is following them around, leading them into temptation and knocking them off one by one, as Harold Wallender's assistant, Michael Evans catches them in the act, when he's not busy pursuing beautiful actress Olga Edwardes.

With dialogue that sounds like it's from a boy's newspaper, a frenetic score by Hans Gunther Stumpf, and lighting by cameraman S. D. Onions that throws dramatic shadows on the bare walls of underdecorated sets, it's the model of a quota quickie that doesn't strain the brain too much. It's a pleasant enough time water for an undemanding audience.
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7/10
"The only singin' you do now will be on the end of a harp...!"
richardchatten21 May 2020
The first - and last - feature film made by a director with a background in public information films. This comprises a vividly photographed, tongue-in-cheek Edgar Wallace pastiche obviously swiftly polished off on half a shoestring depicting the downfall of a gang of six criminals engineered by Scotland Yard detective Harold Warrender.
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7/10
Low budget, but well worth a look ...
spottedowl6 October 2008
The movie title refers to a gang of six criminals that Scotland Yard is unable to pin a charge against even though they are positive of the identities.

Throughout the film the gang members are, one by one, set up and framed with a charge that ensures a decent jail term – who is pulling the strings for this to occur? It seems the only link is the 'femme' Christina, but how and why this would be an answer is not clear until the final few minutes when the whole mystery is unraveled.

This is a 'B' movie time waster and will not appear in any desirable list. The actors try hard and for the most part do very well with the available material. It is certainly worth an hour of your time, particularly if you enjoy the British B movie Crime / Drama genre.

7 /10 from me
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6/10
The Six Men
CinemaSerf26 December 2022
This is actually quite a quirkily constructed little crime noir. It centres around a gang of thieves whom the police seem incapable of catching. Try as they might, they just cannot garner any evidence to arrest and convict these six men. Suddenly, though - their impenetrable armour starts to slip. One by one, they are apprehended for seemingly unassociated crimes until they gradually come to conclude that it is one amongst them who is setting them up. Who might this traitor be? What is most striking about this drama is the setting. A grim and seamy post war London with bombed-out buildings, a thriving black market and some seedy nightclubs where, perhaps, the less said about the quality of the jazz the better? Peter Bull has one of those instantly recognisable, British Bulldog, faces and he steals this ahead of an otherwise unremarkable cast delivering some standard dialogue before a conclusion that does offer us a twist or two (even if we do, kind of, know who is doing the manipulating). At just over an hour, it's decently paced and delivers adequately for an afternoon B-feature. Not great, but good enough.
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