"The Edgar Wallace Mystery Theatre" Five to One (TV Episode 1963) Poster

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8/10
Intelligently written, well acted, low budget crime drama
last-picture-show7 October 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Watching this entry in the Edgar Wallace Mysteries series it's hard to believe that John Thaw was just 21 years old at the time. He plays a hard bitten, world-weary villain who's trying to steal the takings from a betting shop. He acts like someone a good ten years older than his years and gives a very impressive performance. An excellent supporting cast, believable dialogue and good use of locations make this a top notch minor crime thriller. All-in-all a very entertaining 55 minutes.

Alan Roper (Thaw) tells Turf Accountant Larry Hart (Lee Montague) that he is planning to steal £60,000 and Hart offers to launder the money for him at his usual rate ('Five to one', ie £12,000). What Hart doesn't know is that it is actually his money Roper intends to steal, ie the £12,000 Hart will gather to pay him.

Hart tells his clerk not to bank his takings that week because he will need at least £12,000 of ready cash for a business deal, in fact it is to cover his arrangement with Roper. Meanwhile Roper has set up his girlfriend Pat (Ingrid Hafner) to have a sexual liaison with married insurance broker Deighton (Ewan Roberts) at a flat where Pat is babysitting. Roper and his associate Len (Brian McDermott) pose as Pat's husband and a private detective threatening to site Deighton as a co-respondent in their divorce. Roper blackmails Deighton into revealing details of Hart's insurance policy at the shop which include security information and the safe combination.

When they receive the policy details from Deighton they discover that his company have only overseen the insurance for his house, not his shop. So Roper and his gang engineer a complex plan. They break into Hart's home after drugging him and make copies of his house and shop keys. They then stage a dummy break-in at the betting shop but get away before they are caught. This forces Hart to put the £12,000 into his safe at home where Roper's gang plan to steal it. This all goes according to plan except Hart had his suspicions and had the combination of his safe changed after transferring the cash. However determined not to be outdone Roper and Len mess up the house and wait until Hart arrives home. When he opens the safe to check it they knock him out and steal the cash.

However the plan fails because the house they chose to use for the babysitting/blackmail scam turned out to be the home of the detective investigating the case, Inspector Davis (Jack Watson). Deighton got cold feet and went back to the flat to confront Pat and upon learning the truth told the Inspector everything.

So there's a neat twist in the tale which is one of the more intelligent and believable entries in the Edgar Wallace series. If you get a chance to see it, do so.
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6/10
Five to One
Prismark1021 November 2021
There is a great story here. Let down by pedestrian direction and a lot of talking.

John Thaw plays crook Alan Roper who is planning a big job. He plans to rob £60,000 and is making arrangements with bookie Larry Hart (Lee Montague) to launder the money.

Hart charges Five to One for his conversion rate. Roper will get back £12,000. Hart starts to make arrangements to put £12,000 in his safe.

In fact Roper and his cohorts plan to rob Hart's safe in the betting shop. A neat double cross.

Part of the plan is to get an insurance broker involved in a honey trap and then persuade him to give details of the combination to Hart's safe.

The plan does not go according to plan. Roper has to improvise but there is a twist. Roper should had known who his girlfriend was babysitting for.

Some dependable acting from familiar faces. It needed to be more dynamic.
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7/10
Enjoyable for the performance of John Thaw.
Sleepin_Dragon8 January 2023
Alan Roper comes up with an audacious plan to rob a bookie of £60k, meaning the big time for himself, his partner John Lea, and his girlfriend Pat.

One of my favourite shows from the 60's is Francis Durbridge's Bat out of Hell, which stars John Thaw, this put me in mind of that, it's a thriller with a few twists and turns, and a low budget made for TV drama.

It's an entertaining installment, I don't think anyone could argue that it's the most exciting looking production of all, however the story is good, and boasts enough twists and turns to keep you entertained.

The best bit has to be the moment where Roper and Lea realise that there's a spanner in the works, that's the point where it moved up a couple of notches.

Best of all for me was the acting of John Thaw, he's excellent here, dry and charismatic.

Pretty good, 7/10.
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9/10
Excellent entry in the series
lucyrfisher25 August 2021
Good black and white photography with some arty touches - like framing Pat's face in the wing mirror.

She is excellent - pretty but believably unglamorous. John Thaw is amazing as you'd expect, and his sidekick is impressive. They all have a "don't care" air, as if they were gum-chewing even when they aren't. But they don't go over the top with the "Cool it daddio I hate everybody over 30" body language.

They dream up a convoluted plot to rob a bookmaker with lots of money and no taste. Lots of twists!
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