Peril for the Guy (1956) Poster

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8/10
Light and gently silly crime caper
darriuk25 May 2018
Another charming adventure from the Children's Film Foundation. This time a gang of kids is out to foil the plans of a sinister oil 'baron' and his goons, who they discover have kidnapped Prof. Picton PhD, the slick-haired inventor of an ingenious and much prized oil-detector device. The baron himself is of the old school, with his cut glass accent and manor house bedecked with suits of armour and oak panelled walls hiding secret doors - just the place for good old fashioned skullduggery!

Like other films from the Foundation this a ripping yarn told well, with great performances from the child leads. It's not a tale with much emotional power-unlike for example 'Johnny on the Run', another CFF film made 3 years prior-but it skips along at a jaunty pace with the kids getting into all sorts of amusing scrapes and taking every opportunity to tussle with the baddies. All in all a slight and enjoyable tale of kids (hooray!) defeating the baddies (boo!), with only a little help from the mostly dithering adults. Special mention too for Geoffrey Wright's playful score which adds much to the gentle silliness of this warm hearted film.
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7/10
Took me back to my youth and having 'adventures' .....
mch246916 April 2021
Great yarn for kids, or at least it was at one time....! I remember watching these CFF films as a kid around the late 60's and I still enjoyed watching it again.... I remember the excitement with wanting the film to end (Whilst still wanting to see the end!) so we could get out and do similar japes.... Go kart made from pram wheels and orange boxes and playing around bombed out buildings and wasteland... and even then still playing around wreckage of the odd German plane in some of the woods .... making camps and playing the heroes!

It was also good to watch adult actors in these CFF films that your parents would know from the movies they watched.... so looking back I never saw these movies as 'cheap' or 'half done' because of the target audience, indeed the quality was equal to the older audience films of the day.... and anyone from a later generation watching these should remember that this is just how kids were back then and we loved it.... ! Penny for the guy..? Though I don't think any kids today would know that we once celebrated November 5th in the way we see here.... Halloween never existed as we see it today and it was November 5th that was the big Bonfire Night... when we would set fire to our guys on the local field or park and watch the fireworks with sparklers.... back then we could buy fireworks or a lot of them ourselves....! I still think kids back then were more mature than we see today.... even though some say kids grow up quickly today I don't think they are as well educated or mature as the kids back then.... but this film is a great adventure from a long gone era...!
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8/10
Why can't we have them now?
marktayloruk3 April 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Seriously- how about making these kind of harmless films untrammelled by malcontents today? Interesting that this 50s film included an Asian kid as "one of the gang " and that the professor insisted on giving his invention to the government rather than selling it to an oil company.
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1/10
I remember it well
malcolmgsw7 June 2021
Every year just before Guy Fawkes night there would be kids with a guy asking "penny for the guy" Then there are the empty streets of Hampstead. What a contrast to today.

A great CFF film.
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8/10
Brawling mayhem
Leofwine_draca30 March 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Another action-packed and comedic Children's Film Foundation adventure. This one feels inspired by the American LITTLE RASCALS films, particular in the young and athletic figure of Ali, who is undoubtedly the best character in the movie and involved in a lot of fun escapades. Once again a gang of kids find themselves mixed up with criminals, and kidnapping, hostage scenarios, escapes and chases play out. It's lively and enthusiastic, made long before health and safety existed, with fireworks shoved in faces and all kind of brawling mayhem going on. Great fun.
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1/10
Was it really like this?
spidargirl5 April 2021
Talking Pictures' Saturday morning pictures' at the moment are showing a great program of films from Children's Film Foundation. A must for us Baby Boomers. In glorious black and white.

Peril for the guy is about 1hr long. With beautiful scenes of misty morning streets with hardly a car in sight. With a nice friendly policeman to keep you safe and find a penny for you. You can learn about £, shillings and pence too Lovely child actors who went on to long film and TV careers.

Just right to show social history to the grand children.

I can remember children pouncing on me as I got of the bus on smoggy evenings yelling 'penny for the Gus miss' in the 1960s.
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10/10
Dangerous Fireworks - Who Cares!
TondaCoolwal9 April 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Another jolly romp from the golden age of CFF. It's the usual plot; a gang of mischievous kids are the bane of the local bobby's life, which becomes a problem when they try to convince him there's wrongdoing afoot. In this case Professor Picton and his oil detector have been taken by the boss of a big oil company. The gang become aware of this while collecting pennies for the guy in order to buy fireworks for Guy Fawkes Night.. The baddies fool the policeman and the kids get themselves caught when they try to rescue the professor. Ingeniously they fire rockets from a window which alerts the fire brigade. Young Ali escapes and again rouses the Police. Meanwhile the gang keep the villains at bay with a barrage of fireworks on the staircase. The big boss escapes but, a dropped note reveals he is headed to the old airport where he is collared. The kids' reward is a big bonfire party with lots of fireworks. Remarkably the inclusion of a young Asian boy in the gang was unusual for the time. Ali acquits himself with distinction. Not least in swinging on a rope two storeys up on the side of a house and hurtling downhill in The Comet, the kids soapbox cart. The setting off of fireworks indoors looks hazardous and there is a brilliant stunt at the end when big boss Ritter is suspended on a rope from a helicopter, before dropping into the river. These films always seem to be made during cold weather as evidenced by the breath on the air. Credits mention filming in Hampstead, but the location mentioned is Didsbury which is in Manchester. This might explain the Home Counties accents. Keep 'em comin'!
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8/10
Great Innocent Fun from a Lost Age
nigel_hawkes11 November 2022
Courtesy again from UK's Talking Pictures channel.

Some of the cast reappeared in the later "The Salvage Gang" (1958).

Empty streets, bomb site dens, kids using their initiative, friendly (but incompetent) coppers, absent parents (replaced by a professor), a nasty crooked gang of adults (with a slight suggestion of Cold War skulduggery)....it's all here.

Interesting to see how Bonfire Night was the event then, not Halloween. I well remember how we all could buy fireworks with minimal effort and supervision; one of our favourites was the Banger, and some of us had "banger guns"-a piece of curved pipe with a "touch hole"-the banger was inserted fuse first, lit via the touch hole, then pointed at a mate! We all survived.

Interesting, too, to see the Asian kid-Ali-here as well as in the later film; "inclusion" and "diversity" featured a fair bit in these CFF productions but it was natural-not forced and embarrassing like the increasingly laughable BBC and others come across when they get on the latest fashionable bandwagon.

A good quality production in all areas with many recognisable actors that will have us reaching for our film directories or the search engine...
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