The Bank Messenger Mystery is a 1936 British crime film directed by Lawrence Huntington and starring George Mozart, Francesca Bahrle and Paul Neville. It was an early Hammer Films production by Lawrence Huntington.
According to the British Film Institute's British Films, 1927âÂÂ1939, the film was "in production" in 1936; however the BFI database gives the release date as 1940. Advertisements in the trade paper Kine Weekly indicate that the film was trade shown in 1940 in Manchester, Cardiff and London. In 1940 the Monthly Film Bulletin listed the film under "films issued between March 20 and April 24". The British Board of Film Classification dates the film as 1940.
The Encyclopedia of Hammer Films states that no actual evidence of a theatrical release exists. The entry for the film Hammer Films: An Exhaustive Filmography mentions without evidence a 1936 trade show, and states "it is not known if it ever saw the inside of a theatre".
A bank cashier feels he has been wrongfully fired and teams up with some criminals to rob the bank.
Kine Weekly wrote: "The plot is stereotyed and the conclusion is obvious. Except for one short sequence, when the burglars are in the strong-room, action is slow. There is, however, both humour and sentiment mixed with the crooks' criminality, and the film should be acceptable to industrial type of programme. ...The suspense and the love angle will satisfy all but the sophisticated."