Most Popular Martin Curtis Trailers
Total trailers found: 11
The Silent Playground Trailer (1963)
31 December 1963
Police hunt for mental hospital out patient Simon Lacey, who has been unwittingly handing out barbiturates to children as sweets.
Mozambique Trailer (1964)
07 December 1964
An American pilot assists the Portuguese colonial police who are battling a gang of criminals involved in drug smuggling from Lisbon to Mozambique to Zanzibar.
City of Fear Trailer (1965)
01 August 1965
A Canadian reporter gets mixed up in Cold-War politics, romance and espionage in Eastern Europe.
The Cool Mikado Trailer (1963)
07 January 1963
In this musical, the Gilbert and Sullivan classic is updated and set in post-war Japan. This time, the trouble begins when a soldier, the son of a Yankee judge, falls in love with a Japanese girl.
Three Dawns to Sydney Trailer (1949)
01 January 1949
A documentary that follows the flight of a BOAC Lancastrian airliner travelling from London to Sydney that offers some observations from the passengers and of the places en route (Sicily, Lydda, Karachi, Singapore and Darwin).
The Dim Little Island Trailer (1949)
02 January 1949
Osbert Lancaster, James Fisher, John Ormston and Ralph Vaughn Williams meditate on the history and culture of England.
Fiend Without a Face Trailer (1958)
03 July 1958
An American airbase in Canada provokes resentment from the nearby residents after fallout from nuclear experiments at the base are blamed for a recent spate of disappearances.
Just for You Trailer (1964)
01 June 1964
Sam Costa is a man about town, dispensing wisdom and witty quips from the bed of his Space Age bachel
Never Put It in Writing Trailer (1964)
27 April 1964
An executive, passed over for a promotion, sends an angry letter to his bosses while in Ireland. Learning he's up for a better job, he rushes to retrieve the letter.
It's All Over Town Trailer (1963)
01 December 1963
A series of musical vignettes formed from the dreams of a slumbering workman.
Family Portrait Trailer (1950)
01 December 1950
In preparation for the celebration of the 1951 Festival of Britain, this short film was released to assure British citizens of their nation's place in the world and of their own places within that nation.