Hancock's film career consisted of only five films; one as supporting player, two as the star, and two as guest artist. Some of these tapes are still available to buy. So keep those minces peeled!
Railway Cuttings is the first Web site to contain this information, in detail and with pictures. The most comprehensive collection of Hancock related films anywhere on the Web, so far!

Though not the Hancock character well known from the later TV shows, Hancock's performance in this remarkably silly film is the best thing in it as he drills his military musicians.

 

For this films pressbook - click here

Orders Are Orders - 1954

Bilchester Barracks is invaded by Waggermeyer Pictures, who have plans for a science fiction film. The entire barracks is persuaded by the female film stars to take part in the film - to the annoyance of the Divisional Commander, who makes a surprise inspection. He is mollified only when the Band performs a pseudonymous composition of his. In the end he persuades the film company to finish their work in a nearby haunted house. This dire comedy, loosely based on a play of 1932, is enlivened only by Sid Jame's unlikely American accent, and Hancock's droll performance as the Bandmaster.

Group3 / British Lion, 78mins

Running time of video release: 78mins (according to packaging)

The cast list for this film can be found on the Internet Movie Database - just follow this link: Orders Are Orders on IMDb

A dca Release (distributors corporation of america)
US release - NTSC format
Released (date not known) - Now deleted

The Punch & Judy Man - 1962

The one and only Hancock is a melancholy Punch and Judy man trying to establish himself as an important citizen in the seaside town where he performs with his partner, Hugh Lloyd. When his snobbish wife is taught a lesson at an important social function, it looks like the British comic genius may just get the hilarious new lease of life he's always dreamed of.

MacConkey Productions/Warner-Pathé, 96mins

The fortune teller (Hattie Jacques) Wally, and the Sandman (John LeMesurier) in a scene not in the finished film; Hattie Jacques, makes only a brief appearance.

S038340 (Warner Home Video) Lumiere
- Double Feature -
Released 1993 - Now deleted
Combined running time: approx 189mins (according to packaging)
For The Rebel pressbook - click here
For The Punch... pressbook - click here
To see the UK Lobby Cards for both these films - go here and here
To see the Lobby Card set for the US release of 'The Rebel' - 'Call Me Genius!', go here
To see the Movie posters for the US release of 'The Rebel' - 'Call Me Genius!', go here
The cast lists for both these films can be found on the Internet Movie Database - just follow these links: The Punch & Judy Man & The Rebel on IMDb

Mrs Cravatte (Irene Handl) comes to investigate the strange banging sounds in Hancock's bedroom: 'I can't allow ammering in my rooms'. She is even less pleased with him when she sees the cause, and after an altercation tells him to get out.

The Rebel - 1960

(re-titled 'Call Me Genius!', for the US market)

Frustrated creative artiste and bored City clerk, Hancock decides to escape across the Channel to la vie de Bohéme. So it's farewell East Cheam, au revoir Railway Cuttings. Off to Paris he goes, resolved to be a successful artist - or cut off his ear...

Associated British/Warner-Pathé, 105mins

S1033-50 (CBS FOX Video)

Those Magnificent Men In Their Flying Machines - 1965

The setting: England in the year 1910. The occasion: the first International Air Race from London to Paris. The prize: £10,000 put up by a wealthy newspaper proprietor determined to prove that Britannia rules the air as well as the waves. A large-scale comedy classic, packed with stuntwork and spectacular flying scenes and including the late great Tony Hancock in it's all star cast.

20th-Century-Fox, 132mins

Running time of video release: 127mins (according to packaging)

The cast list for this film can be found on the Internet Movie Database - just follow this link: Those Magnificent Men In Their Flying Machines on IMDb

Hancock as Harry Popperwell, who proposes to enter the London to Paris air race of 1910 by flying backwards ('less air resistance'). He is last seen heading in the direction of Scotland.

 

For this films pressbook - click here
There was also a book published as a tie-in to this film - click here and check it out!
Released 1987 - Now deleted

Hancock and Dudley Moore chat between takes. In a way an ironic photograph, for Moore - then only known for his British TV appearances with Peter Cook - was later to go to Hollywood and achieve exactly the kind of international comic stardom which Hancock hoped for.

 

For this films pressbook - click here
There was also a book published as a tie-in to this film - click here and check it out!
Read what's written on the back cover of this Laser Disc relsease - some very intersting tales, about the film, by both Forbes and Caine, here

The Wrong Box - 1966

Tony Hancock appears as a detective who attempts to unravel the plot at the end of this adaptation of the novel. Hancock is given little enough to do, merely expressing exasperation when faced with the convolutions at the end of this extremely complicated plot involving a Tontine, mistaken identities, and a corpse in a grand piano. He attacks his part with gusto, but tends to be swamped, as are many of the cast, by the inclination of the writers to 'improve' the original by the addition of a wide variety of intrusive comic devices.

Salamander / BLC / Columbia, 110mins

Running time of laser disc release: 107mins (according to packaging)

81866 (Columbia TriStar Home Video)
US release - NTSC format - Laser Disc
Released 1996 - Now deleted

The cast list for this film can be found on the Internet Movie Database - just follow this link: The Wrong Box on IMDb

These video tapes and laser disc aren't current releases and are therefore no longer available. In fact, a couple of them, such as the US releases of The Wrong Box (laser disc) and Orders Are Orders (video), are especially rare. You can however find them about second-hand, if you look hard enough. So keep those minces peeled!

The brief synopsis for The Wrong Box and Orders Are Orders was taken from Tony Hancock 'Artiste' by Roger Wilmut. If you haven't got a copy, then get one! This is the best Tony Hancock companion ever! You'll have to look for a second-hand copy though, as this book is currently out of print. It's quite a rare book now, so could be hard to track down... Persist though, shall be rewarded, I'm quite sure. Well worth the hunt, and probably the wait!
Pictures and accompanying text (below each pic) taken from The Illustrated Hancock by Roger Wilmut

 

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