The Jokers

The Jokers(1967)

NR
05/15/1967 (US)Comedy, Crime1h 34m
6.0

"The Robbery of the Century... it would be a Crime to miss it!"

Overview

Brothers Michael and David Tremayne decide to steal the Crown Jewels from the Tower of London, not for criminal purposes, but to make themselves famous.

Dick Clement

Screenplay

Ian La Frenais

Screenplay

Michael Winner

Story

Michael Winner

Director

Popularity Trend

Last 30 Days
This chart shows the popularity trend over the past 30 days.

Media

The Jokers Intro and Theme (1967) Michael Crawford and Oliver Reed

The Jokers Intro and Theme (1967) Michael Crawford and Oliver Reed

Trailer

The Jokers 1967 robbery heist clip

The Jokers 1967 robbery heist clip

Clip

The Jokers (1967) - the brothers fall out

The Jokers (1967) - the brothers fall out

Clip

The Jokers (1967) - the brothers get an idea

The Jokers (1967) - the brothers get an idea

Clip

Social

C
A review by CinemaSerf
7.0

Written on September 5, 2024

OK, so maybe Michael Winner got a bit carried away with the poster claiming this as exciting as "Topkapi" (1964) but it is still quite an entertaining crime caper to watch. Michael Crawford is "Michael", dragooned from his army regiment - it turns out he has rather a habit of being kicked out of things. He unites with his successful, raffish, brother "David" (Oliver Reed) and the pair decide on some sort of spectacular revenge. What to do, though? Well a visit to the Tower of London soon settles that. Crawford sets up a false identity as an Irish bomber and they gradually create a pretty effective degree of panic amongst the establishment as they cannibalise coffee pots and the like into makeshift explosive devices... When their real crime comes along, the crowing glory of their plan is accomplished. They had planned to return their ill-gotten loot, but at this point the brothers deviate from their plan - "Michael" neglects to follow through with certain aspects of their deal leaving poor old "David" high and dry, and in the clink! An efficient supporting cast - Harry Andrews, Sir Michael Hordern, Daniel Massey and James Donald along with a fast moving, quite humorous, script from writers Ian La Frenais and Dick Clement (who went on to write the classic BBC sitcom "Porridge" in 1974) makes this a better effort than I expected it to be. Reed and Crawford work well together, and it's just good fun.