Operation Stogie

1962 British film by Ernest Morris From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Operation Stogie is a 1962[1] British comedy film directed by Ernest Morris and starring John Hewer,[2] Anton Rogers and Susan Stephen.[3][4] It was written by M.M. McCormack and produced by The Danzigers.

Directed byErnest Morris
Written byM.M. McCormack
Produced by
Starring
  • John Hewer
  • Anton Rogers
Quick facts Directed by, Written by ...
Operation Stogie
Theatrical release poster
Directed byErnest Morris
Written byM.M. McCormack
Produced by
Starring
  • John Hewer
  • Anton Rogers
CinematographyJimmy Wilson
Edited byJohn Dunsford
Music byBill LeSage
Release date
  • 1962 (1962)
Running time
75 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
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Plot

General Tankard visits Scattershot, an Officer Cadet Training Centre commanded by Major Soames, to inform him that the army is on a new efficiency drive and wants to reduce the number of cadets that can graduate. Major Soames therefore devises a set of initiative tests that each cadet must pass, or be thrown off the course. Cadets Ted and Jock are particularly slippery customers, so Major Soames sets them an outrageous and seemingly impossible task – codenamed "Operation Stogie" – to prove their suitability for officer training. They must find a way to attend an elite party – a party so exclusive that even the Prime Minister can't get an invite – to be held at the ultra-posh Cormorant Manor. Further, they must prove their attendance with a photograph of each of them with their arm around Lady Cormorant. And if that were not an impossible enough task, Lady Cormorant must be smoking a cigar when the photo is taken. Ted and Jock accept the challenge and excute their operation with cunning and military precision.

Cast

Production

Filming started at New Elstree Studios on 7 Octrober 1960.[5]

References

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