Borgarkeri
A bit overrated, but still an amazing film
Senteur
As somebody who had not heard any of this before, it became a curious phenomenon to sit and watch a film and slowly have the realities begin to click into place.
Ogosmith
Each character in this movie — down to the smallest one — is an individual rather than a type, prone to spontaneous changes of mood and sometimes amusing outbursts of pettiness or ill humor.
Frances Chung
Through painfully honest and emotional moments, the movie becomes irresistibly relatable
Leofwine_draca
BARBADOS QUEST is the first of two outings for Tom Conway's ageing private eye 'Duke' Martin, a guy who can never sit still but must go around solving crimes wherever he sees them. BREAKAWAY was the sequel which followed shortly although it's not as good as this movie. BARBADOS QUEST sounds like an interesting precursor to Bond, promising globetrotting and an exotic location, but unfortunately the Barbados of the title in reality refers to a rare stamp.Yes, it's a crime film built around stamp collecting, and as genteel and sedate as it sounds despite a handful of fight scenes being shoehorned into the plot. The first half of this film has a genuine sense of mystery about it as the viewer isn't sure what's happened and isn't sure what's going on either. In the second half, the motivations of the entire cast are quite clear and things slow down considerably as a result with the sense of mystery lost.Conway is an acceptable lead despite being too long in the tooth to successfully convince as the protagonist. Delphi Lawrence does a good job of playing the glamorous woman involved in the case, but the real scene stealer is Michael Balfour who excels in his 'comedy sidekick' role. The final mention goes to Brian Worth, who channels some of the spirit of a youthful Dennis Price as a mysterious figure involved in the proceedings. BARBADOS QUEST is no masterpiece, but for a film about stamp collecting it's surprisingly efficient.
blanche-2
"Murder on Approval" aka "Barbados Quest" from 1955 is evidently the second film about this character, Tom "Duke" Martin, a private investigator. In this one, Martin is hired by an American who believes that while in England, he paid $10,000 for an overprint of a Barbados stamp which he believes is fake. He wants his money back.Martin flies to London and meets up with his Barney Wilson (Mark Balfour). Soon the two are up to their necks in fraud, murder, and robbery."Murder on Approval" doesn't have much of a budget, and Tom Conway in is a familiar Falcon/Saint type role -- a smooth, elegant ladies' man who gets in the way of a police investigation. Nothing new there. The attractive Delphi Lawrence plays the secretary of a wealthy woman who inherited a Barbados stamp.Michael Balfour adds a little spice to the proceedings.It's slow-moving and not very exciting.Just okay.
sol1218
***SPOILERS*** Slow and boring film about a valuable stamp from Barbados that's been faked to look real that leads to a number of people being murdered because of it. It's up to private investigator Tom Martin, Tom Conway, to get to the bottom of this mystery. It's Martin who with the help of his lovable ex convict sidekick Barney Wilson, Michael Balfour, who cracks the case wide open in uncovering who's behind all this shenanigans. There's also pretty Jean Larson,Delphi Lawrence, who ends up becoming Martin's lover only to later end up behind bars in her working for the person who not only ended up murdering two people but implicating her in the killing without Jean even knowing it.Boring as hell with very little to recommend it the film does have a really cool car chase through the English countryside to keep you from falling asleep as well as Berney's wise cracks that's about the best dialog in the entire film. As for the person behind this stamp sham, as well as murders, he's about as obvious as a advance case of the German Measles in being exposed almost as soon as we, and Tom Martin,were introduced to him. Thus taking away all the suspense,if there ever was any, that would keep you watching to find out who exactly did it! The two murders in the film as well as the person who had forged the Barbados stamp almost making the genuine ones, there was only four of them minted, worthless on the open world stamp collectors market.Tom Conway the former Saint of the 1930's and 1940's does is best to stay sober, by then he was suffering from a case of acute alcoholism, and alert in the film and does manage to somehow pull it off. But what Conway and the rest of the cast couldn't do is save the movie which was dead on arrival even before it began rolling. The film "Murder on Approval" got the stamp of disapproval by both the movie critics and movie audience by dying at the box office almost as soon as it opened! And to those involved in the film it couldn't have totally and completely disappeared from the movie going public's memories fast enough!
GUENOT PHILIPPE
Bad surprise for me. I expected much more from this British thriller produced by Monty Berman and Robert Baker. Boring, talkative, no real action. The topic is forgettable. Story about investigation around stamps, with a Tom Neal - Georges Sanders' brother - no concerned at all. No suspense, flat ending.British crime films, thrillers, are often like this movie, especially 50's ones. You have to be lucky to catch the good one.I have not seen other films from the director Bernard Knowles, they are not easily available. Perhaps are they better than this one ?But this item would please some users if they may watch it.