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  1. The Glass Cage (American title: The Glass Tomb) is a 1955 British second feature mystery film, directed by Montgomery Tully and starring John Ireland, Honor Blackman and Sid James. It was made by Hammer Film Productions. The film is based on the novel The Outsiders (a.k.a. Common People) by A.E. Martin.

  2. The Glass Tomb: Directed by Montgomery Tully. With John Ireland, Honor Blackman, Geoffrey Keen, Eric Pohlmann. Crowds flock to a carnival sideshow to see "The Starving Man", a heavyset man who claims he can go 70 days without eating.

    • (334)
    • Mystery
    • Montgomery Tully
    • 1955-04-15
  3. Overview. A circus barker stages a sensational new act, the world's longest fast undertaken by “Sapolio”, on view in a glass cage. But this act also results in several murders, a kidnapping, and a poisoning! Montgomery Tully. Director. A.E. Martin. Novel. Richard H. Landau. Screenplay.

  4. Released April 15th, 1955, 'The Glass Cage' stars John Ireland, Honor Blackman, Geoffrey Keen, Eric Pohlmann The NR movie has a runtime of about 59 min, and received a user score of 58 (out of 100 ...

  5. Visit the movie page for 'The Glass Cage' on Moviefone. Discover the movie's synopsis, cast details and release date. Watch trailers, exclusive interviews, and movie review. Your guide to this ...

    • (10)
    • John Ireland
    • Montgomery Tully
    • Hammer Film Productions Lippert Films
  6. The Glass Cage is a film directed by Montgomery Tully with John Ireland, Honor Blackman, Geoffrey Keen, Eric Pohlmann .... Year: 1955. Original title: The Glass Cage. Synopsis: 'Pel' Pelham is a veteran carnival barker who's happily married and desperately wants a good education for his young son. With money borrowed from bookie Tony Lewis, he ...

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  8. The working title of this film was The Outsiders, and it was released in Great Britain on August 29, 1955 as The Glass Cage.According to a September 9, 1948 Daily Variety news item, the rights to A. E. Martin's novel were originally purchased by Eronel Productions, with Herbert G. Luft "set to supervise script development."