Australian label Imprint Films has announced its March batch of Blu-ray releases. They are:
Some Girls Do (1969),
Maroc 7 (1967),
Hot Enough for June (1964),
Three Into Two Won't Go (1969),
Another Time, Another Place (1958), and
Up the Junction (1968).
SOME GIRLS DO
"These girls love men, and show it in an extraordinary way. Titillating, unusual, exotic, but always very, VERY dangerous!"
From the height of the Swinging Sixties comes everybody's favourite Aston Martin-driving British spy with an eye for the ladies… Bulldog Drummond! A powerful criminal is using murder and sabotage to delay the development of the world's first supersonic airliner. Taking on murderous supervillains is all in a day's work for Bulldog, but can he hold his own against an army of seductive fembots with electronic brains?
From prolific British director Ralph Thomas (Doctor in the House, Conspiracy of Hearts) comes an iconic entry in the cult comedy spy series. Richard Johnson (Deadlier Than the Male) reprises his role as Bulldog, alongside Sydne Rome (Sex with a Smile) as ditsy sidekick Flicky, and James Villiers (For Your Eyes Only) as the villainous Carl Peterson, with legendary character actor Robert Morley (Oscar Wilde) appearing as undercover spy Miss Mary.
MAROC 7
From director Gerry O'Hara (The Pleasure Girls) and screenwriter David Osborn (Deadlier Than the Male) comes a 1967 British globe-trotting thriller of jewel thieves, secret identities, and double-crosses.
Fashion editor Louise Henderson may seem respectable, but in reality, she's a criminal mastermind, using her magazine as a front for her jewel-thieving ring. It's up to undercover man Simon Grant to stop her, posing as a safecracker to infiltrate her gang and bring them down from the inside. But with criminals, police, and secret agents converging in Morocco, who will end up with the priceless Arabian medallion?
Starring Gene Barry (Naked Alibi), Denholm Elliott (The Boys From Brazil), Elsa Martinelli (Hatari!), Leslie Phillips (Out of Africa), Alexandra Stewart (Day For Night), and Hollywood legend Cyd Charisse (Brigadoon) as mastermind Lousie Henderson, Maroc 7 also boasts a hit theme song performed by legendary instrumental rock group The Shadows.
HOT ENOUGH FOR JUNE
Dirk Bogarde is an unwitting spy in this Cold War comedy!
Nicholas Whistler believes he's working as a trainee executive for a glass company when he's sent on a business trip behind the Iron Curtain, unaware he's actually on a secret mission for British intelligence. Upon arriving in Prague, Whistler soon finds himself caught in a web of intrigue involving communist agents, secret police, code words, and the beautiful Vlasta, who may be more than she appears.
Starring Dirk Bogarde (Doctor in the House) and Sylva Koscina (The Secret War of Harry Frigg) alongside a murderer's row of legendary character actors, including Leo McKern (A Man For All Seasons), Robert Morley (The African Queen), John Le Mesurier (Dad's Army), Richard Vernon (The Hitch-Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy), Derek Nimmo (Casino Royale), Derek Fowlds (Yes, Minister), Roger Delgado (Doctor Who) and more.
THREE INTO TWO WON'T GO
"The story of a man… a woman… and a girl who rated all her lovers in a little black book!"
Steve Howard, a middle-aged British sales executive trapped in an unhappy marriage, has an impulsive affair with a young hitchhiker, Ella. But when Steve arrives home, he discovers Ella has introduced herself to Steve's wife Frances and moved in. With all his secrets under one roof, Steve must keep his relationship with Ella hidden at all costs.
Three Into Two Won't Go stars then-couple Rod Steiger (On the Waterfront) and Claire Bloom (The Spy Who Came in From the Cold), alongside Judy Geeson (To Sir, With Love) and Peggy Ashcroft (A Passage To India). This captivating drama was directed by Sir Peter Hall, a man described by The Times as "the most important figure in British theatre for half a century".
The film caused a storm of controversy when a heavily-altered version aired on US television – the original (presented here in its full, uncensored cut) was considered too sensational for American audiences.
ANOTHER TIME, ANOTHER PLACE
The powerful World War II melodrama Another Time, Another Place (1958) stars Sean Connery in an early leading role, alongside Hollywood legend Lana Turner.
American reporter Sara Scott is working in London at the end of the Second World War, embroiled in a romance with handsome British reporter Mark Trevor. She's ready to break off her engagement to her wealthy boss, Carter, until Mark admits that he is married with a family. But is this fact enough to keep the two lovers apart, and is their relationship doomed before it even begins?
Stars Lana Turner (Imitation of Life), Barry Sullivan (The Bad and the Beautiful), Glynis Johns (Mary Poppins), and in one of his first featured roles, a pre-James Bond Sean Connery.
UP THE JUNCTION
One of the most influential stories of 1960s British culture gets the big screen treatment.
Heiress Polly wants nothing to do with the wealthy life her family enjoys, preferring to live in a small flat at Clapham Junction and work on a factory floor. She soon makes friends and finds a boyfriend, but comes to discover that her romantic ideals of working-class life do not match reality.
Directed by Peter Collinson (The Italian Job), and starring Suzy Kendall (The Bird with the Crystal Plumage), Dennis Waterman (The Sweeney), Adrienne Posta (Some Girls Do), and Maureen Lipman (Educating Rita).











