The Ladykillers
(a.k.a. "The Lady Killers" -- US)

UK (1955): Comedy/Crime

Music professor Alec Guinness rents a London flat from sweet old lady Katie Johnson. He tells her that, from time to time, several other musicians will visit in order to rehearse. In truth, Guinness can't play a note, nor can his visitors: he's a criminal mastermind, holding court over a gang of thieves, including the likes of punkish Peter Sellers, homicidal Herbert Lom and punchdrunk Danny Green. The gang uses Guinness' flat as headquarters as they conceive a daring £60,000 robbery. After pulling off the job, the gang stuffs the loot in a railway station locker. To avoid detection, Guinness convinces the ever-trusting Johnson to pick up the money. Through a series of comic complications, Johnson returns home with a police escort, with neither the woman nor the bobbies suspecting that she's carrying a fortune in her suitcase. Mistakenly believing that Johnson has ratted on them, the gang reluctantly plans to eliminate her. The Ladykillers won an Oscar® nomination for William Rose's screenplay, and a BFA award for veteran character actress Johnson. Alexander Mackendrick directs for Ealing Studios. (Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide)


· Writing (Screenplay original) 1956: William Rose

1 nomination