Sexton Blake and the Hooded Terror
| Sexton Blake and the Hooded Terror | |
|---|---|
| Directed by | George King | 
| Screenplay by | A.R. Rawlinson (screenplay & dialogue) | 
| Based on | The Mystery of No 13. Caversham Square by Pierre Quiroule  | 
| Produced by | George King | 
| Starring | George Curzon Tod Slaughter  | 
| Cinematography | Hone Glendinning | 
| Edited by | John Seabourne | 
| Music by | Jack Beaver (as 'music director')  Bretton Byrd (uncredited)  | 
Production company  | George King Productions  | 
| Distributed by | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (UK) | 
Release date  | 
  | 
Running time  | 70 minutes | 
| Country | United Kingdom | 
| Language | English | 
Sexton Blake and the Hooded Terror is a 1938 British crime film directed by George King and starring George Curzon, Tod Slaughter and Greta Gynt.[1] It was George Curzon's third and final outing as the fictional detective Sexton Blake.[2]
Plot summary
The film - described as the best in the Blake series of 1930s movies[3][4] - features the character of Sexton Blake and his efforts to defeat a major crime organisation headed by Michael Larron, a 'sort of Moriarty figure'.[5]
Cast
- George Curzon as Sexton Blake
 - Tod Slaughter as Michael Larron
 - Greta Gynt as Madamoiselle Julie
 - Tony Sympson as Tinker
 - Charles Oliver as Max Fleming
 - Marie Wright as Mrs. Bardell
 - David Farrar as Granite Grant
 - Norman Pierce as Inspector Bramley
 - H.B. Hallam as Monsieur Bertrand
 - Bradley Watts as Paul Duvall
 
Critical reception
Of the film's villain, Leonard Maltin concluded, "Slaughter plays it basically straight in this passable low-budget outing";[6] while Dennis Schwartz wrote, "Tod Slaughter is a trip as the perverse villain drooling over both stamps and Julie (Greta Gynt), and decked out when meeting gang members in a spiffy black robe with a snake embroidered on its front and a fashionable KKK-like hood. Like Vincent Price, Slaughter can make a not too original low-budget B film fun to watch."[7]
References
- ^ "Sexton Blake and the Hooded Terror (1938)". Archived from the original on 14 January 2009.
 - ^ "Sexton Blake And The Hooded Terror". TVGuide.com.
 - ^ The BFI Companion to Crime, ed Phil Hardy, Cassell (1997), p. 53
 - ^ Famous Movie Detectives II, Michael R Pitts (1991), p.123
 - ^ The Unknown 1930s: An Alternative History of the British Cinema, 1929- 1939, edited by Jeffrey Richards, IB Tauris (1998), pp.92-93
 - ^ "Sexton Blake and the Hooded Terror (1938) - Overview - TCM.com". Turner Classic Movies.
 - ^ Schwartz, Dennis. "hoodedterror". homepages.sover.net.
 
External links