Don't Bother to Knock (1961 film)

Subsequently travelling around Europe on a business trip, Bill has romantic encounters with three women, giving each one a standing invitation to visit him when in Edinburgh plus one of the keys to his flat.

"[3] Todd said the film "was hammered by the press" and was not a commercial success, in part because it was released in summer when the weather was very good.

[4] The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "Despite an elegant wardrobe, pretty faces, and the contemporary trappings of an unusually chic and sunny Edinburgh, this isn't even one of sophisticated comedy's poor relations.

Richard Todd, whose own production this is, seems a shade too mature and world-weary for the slick roué he plays, so that at moments he becomes an unintended figure of pathos in his compulsive philanderings.

Richard Todd looks uncomfortable as the philandering travel agent who discovers, to girlfriend June Thorburn's horror, that all his European flirtations have arrived at his Edinburgh home at once.