Rogue Male

6.5
19761h 43m

In 1939, Sir Robert Thorndyke takes aim at Adolf Hitler with a high powered rifle, but the shot misses its mark. Captured and tortured by the Gestapo and left for dead, Sir Robert makes his way back to England where he discovers the Gestapo has followed him. Knowing that his government would turn him over to German authorities, Sir Robert goes underground in his battle with his pursuers.

Production

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Cast

Photo of Peter O'Toole

Peter O'Toole

Sir Robert Thorndyke

Photo of John Standing

John Standing

Major Quive-Smith

Photo of Alastair Sim

Alastair Sim

The Earl

Photo of Harold Pinter

Harold Pinter

Saul Abrahams

Photo of Michael Byrne

Michael Byrne

Interrogator

Photo of Ray Smith

Ray Smith

Fisherman

Photo of Cyd Hayman

Cyd Hayman

Rebecca

Photo of Ray Mort

Ray Mort

Gerald

Photo of Philip Jackson

Philip Jackson

1st Seaman

Photo of Nicholas Ball

Nicholas Ball

2nd Seaman

Photo of Michael Sheard

Michael Sheard

Adolf Hitler

Photo of Henry Woolf

Henry Woolf

Ticket Office Clerk

Photo of Ron Pember

Ron Pember

Ticket Collector

Photo of Pat Gorman

Pat Gorman

Gestapo

Photo of Ivor Roberts

Ivor Roberts

Mr Drake

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

Based on Geoffrey Household's rather far-fetched book, Peter O'Toole is British aristocrat "Sir Robert" who lays plan to assassinate Adolf Hitler before the start of WWII. After missing an open goal his plan goes awry, and after some fairly brutal torture at the hands of his captor Michael Byrne, he manages to flee the scene of his own proposed demise and to make it back to Blighty where his solicitor and kindly uncle (Alastair Sim) recommends he keep his head down for fear his plot be publicised, and the country be dragged into war...! The Nazis have not, however, given up on their chase and his efforts to stay out of their sights quite literally drive him underground. It is all just a bit silly, to be honest, and the sort of stiff-upper-lip gentlemanly code of hunter and hunted borders a little too much on the sarcastic to be scary and not enough to be amusing - even though O'Toole does have some quite pithy put downs for his Aryan pursuers. It is just about worth watching for fans of the star, but the rest of it need not have been remade from the superior 1941 iteration.

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