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  1. Francis Searle (14 March 1909 – 31 July 2002) was an English film director, writer and producer. He was active in the post- Second World War cinema industry. [2] Amongst the films he directed were The Lady Craved Excitement (1950), One Way Out (1955) and It All Goes to Show (1969).

  2. Francis Searle. Francis Searle was one of the more prolific of British directors. He started his career in 1936, making one-reel shorts, and graduated to two-reel documentaries and low-grade "B" pictures. In the 1970s he turned out a string of 30-minute comedies. His original career was as a layout artist in the advertising industry, but in the ...

    • Director, Producer, Writer
    • March 14, 1909
    • Francis Searle
    • July 31, 2002
  3. Francis Searle. Director: Celia. Francis Searle was one of the more prolific of British directors. He started his career in 1936, making one-reel shorts, and graduated to two-reel documentaries and low-grade "B" pictures. In the 1970s he turned out a string of 30-minute comedies. His original career was as a layout artist in the advertising industry, but in the '30s he was hired at Highbury ...

    • March 14, 1909
    • July 31, 2002
  4. Francis Searle (14 March 1909 – 31 July 2002) was an English film director, writer and producer. Francis started his early cinema appreciation watching silent films in Putney where he was born in 1909. He first worked as a builder of ornate decorations for cinema interiors. He was a drummer in a band as a hobby.

  5. Running time. 67 min. Country. United Kingdom. Language. English. Dead Man's Evidence is a 1962 British black-and-white crime thriller "B" film directed by Francis Searle, starring Conrad Phillips and Jane Griffiths. [1] A British spy is sent to Ireland to investigate the death of a former colleague who defected.

  6. Francis Searle (14 March 1909 – 31 July 2002) was an English film director, writer and producer. He was active in the post-Second World War cinema industry. Amongst the films he directed were The Lady Craved Excitement (1950), One Way Out (1955) and It All Goes to Show (1969).Searle's later projects were all short films, either comedies or dramas, with his final film being made in 1972.

  7. Francis Searle started his early cinema appreciation watching silent films in Putney. First work as a builder of ornate decorations for cinema interiors. Drummer in a group for hobby. Columbia Gramoph