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Penny Points to Paradise

Penny Points to Paradise
Directed by Tony Young
Produced by Alan Cullimore
Written by John Ormonde
Starring Harry Secombe
Alfred Marks
Peter Sellers
Paddie O'Neil
Spike Milligan
Music by Jack Jordan
Spike Milligan
Cinematography Bert Mason
Edited by Harry Booth
Distributed by Adelphi Films
Release date
1951 (1951),1960 (1960)
Running time
77 min (55 min: 1960 re-release)
Country United Kingdom
Language English

Penny Points to Paradise is a 1951 comedy feature film. The film was the feature film debut of the stars of The Goon Show, Spike Milligan, Harry Secombe and Peter Sellers.

The film was directed by Tony Young, who later produced The Telegoons for BBC Television.

Secombe plays the part of Harry Flakers, a man who has a big win on the football pools. He and his friend Spike Donnelly (Milligan) decide to go to the same shabby seaside boarding house that they have always patronised for their summer holiday, but this year all the other guests (including two young women out to marry money, a dodgy investment advisor and a master forger and assistant) are intent on taking the fortune off them in one way or another.

Ultimately the forgers manage to substitute fake five-pound notes for the real ones that Flakers keeps in his suitcase, but before they can abscond with the money one of the girls is given cash by Flakers to buy some cigarettes, and accused of passing false currency when the forgery is detected. A grand chase follows with half the characters pursuing the other half through a waxwork museum in which the true crooks have taken refuge. Justice is served when the chief forger boasts of his crime in front of what he thinks are two waxwork policemen, but who turn out to be real members of the force.

In the final scenes Harry and Spike get married to the two women.

There are sequences featuring a night out at the theatre where a stage hypnotist mesmerises Flakers and the girl Christine into performing an operatic duet, he singing soprano and she baritone, and a scene in which Harry Secombe wordlessly mimes out an entire heart operation being carried out by a nervous surgeon.

According to Peter Sellers "a terrifyingly bad film", the film was not profitable on initial release and was eventually re-issued for distribution abroad in 1960 as a cut-down 55-minute version under the title "Penny Points". Many sections were removed, and some additional unrelated material was incorporated from a short comedy entitled "Let's Go Crazy" which had also featured Sellers. A print of this re-issue survived in the National Film and Sound Archive, Australia.


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