Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. After their grandmother leaves her fortune to a distant relative, two brothers conspire to get their hands on the inheritance — by any means necessary. Watch trailers & learn more.

  2. SHE'LL HAVE TO GO - Bob Monkhouse, Hattie Jacques (1962) £12.99. SHE'LL HAVE TO GO: Down to their last farthing, workshy aristocrats Francis and Douglas learn that their distant cousin, maidservant Toni, has inherited a fortune. After their clumsy courtship efforts fail, the boys decide to murder Toni and claim the legacy for themselves.

  3. After their grandmother leaves her fortune to a distant relative, two brothers conspire to get their hands on the inheritance — by any means necessary. Watch trailers & learn more.

  4. Brothers Francis and Douglas Oberon, find themselves cut off from the family fortune by their late grandmother's will. Their distant cousin (once removed), maidservant Antoinette "Toni" Oberon, is the benefactor of the entire estate fortune and is arriving to view her new property. Facing being homeless, broke, and actually working for a living, the boys devise a plot to either marry ...

  5. Synopsis. When Francis and Douglas Oberon learn that their late grandmother has bequeathed the family fortune to distant cousin Toni, they immediately start plotting to get their hands on the money. They dream up a plot whereby they cannot fail to acquire a comfortable future; the lovely Toni must either be murdered, or married...

    • 89 Min.
  6. 1962. Comedy. Directed by Robert Asher. Stars Bob Monkhouse, Alfred Marks & Hattie Jacques. Two brother's scheme to gain the family fortune after their grandmother bestows it to their cousin.

  7. Starring Bob Monkhouse, Alfred Marks, Hattie Jacques and many key comedy supporting actors from the 1960s, She’ll Have to Go is a stylish, hugely enjoyable farce co-produced by BAFTA-nominated Hammer Films stalwart Jack Asher. Released in the US as Maid for Murder, it is presented here in a brand-new transfer from the original film elements, in its as-exhibited theatrical aspect ratio.