Mr. Denning Drives North is a 1951 British mystery film directed by Anthony Kimmins and starring John Mills, Phyllis Calvert and Sam Wanamaker.
Wealthy aircraft manufacturer Tom Denning and his wife Kay have a daughter, Liz, who is having an affair with Mados, an international crook.
[1] The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "The plot is excessively complicated, depends very largely on coincidence, and makes the remarkable assumption that a man who apparently feels no guilt about his crime should be worried almost to the point of a breakdown by the fact that he appears to have got away with it, and should deliberately begin an investigation likely to lead – as it nearly does – to his own arrest. ...
The extreme unreality of the story is echoed in the characterisation; John Mills has a foolish and unpredictable part, played at least with technical assurance; Phyllis Calvert does little with the understanding wife, and the most enjoyable moments are those provided by Freda Jackson, as a tyrannical and avaricious queen of the gipsies.
"[8] The New York Times wrote: "this little melodrama serves as still another reminder, from a country that jolly well knows how to exercise it, that restraint can work minor wonders [...] Persuasive and tingling, minus one false note [...] No doubt about it.