Band of Thieves (1962 film)

Band of Thieves is a 1962 British musical film directed by Peter Bezencenet and starring Acker Bilk, Geoffrey Sumner and Jennifer Jayne. It was produced as a second feature in an attempt to cash in on the Trad jazz craze. It was shot at Pinewood Studios, with cinematography by Nicolas Roeg.

Plot
Acker Bilk and his trad-jazz band are in prison. On their release they are persuaded by their promoter to burgle local stately homes while on tour. His girlfriend, a policewoman, finds out, and Bilk and his band go back to prison, as does the promoter.

Cast

 * Acker Bilk as himself
 * Colin Smith as Flash
 * Jonathan Mortimer as Fingers
 * Ronald McKay as Scouse
 * Roy James as Dippy
 * Stan Greig as Haggis
 * Jimmy Thompson as Derek Daley
 * Ernest Price as The Mole
 * Geoffrey Sumner as The Governor
 * Jimmy Thompson as Derek
 * Jennifer Jayne as Anne
 * Maudie Edwards as The Duchess
 * Charmian Innes as Mrs. Van Der Ness
 * Arthur Mullard as Getaway
 * Michael Peake as Chief Warder
 * Totti Truman Taylor as woman
 * Marianne Stone as cleaner
 * Eleanor McCready as girl
 * Norrie Paramor as himself, recording engineer
 * Peter Haigh as himself, newsreader
 * Acker Bilk's Paramount Jazz Band as themselves
 * Carol Deene as herself, singer

Critical reception
The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "It's the exuberance that matters. Like a seaside summer show, the film knows its place and its public and isn't ashamed of either. The plot is as zestfully slapdash as the production and the acting. But some cooler jokes suggest a knowing mind at work on the script, and Acker Bilk – both musically and personally – is a welcome addition to the screen ranks."

The Radio Times Guide to Films gave the film 2/5 stars, writing: "Nicolas Roeg received his third credit as a cinematographer on this caper comedy. But jazz fans will be more interested in seeing Acker Bilk starring in the second of his three 1960s pictures. Ostensibly, the clarinettist plays himself. But the real Acker presumably didn't use his gigs as a front for stately home robberies! ... Slight, but fun."