Ten Thousand Talents (1960)
The first film made by Don Levy is a comedic satire of pretensions and perversions of British academia. Made for the Cambridge Film Society, it is shot in grainy black-and-white scuffed up to resemble aged prints of 1920s Surrealist films and displays an astringent sense of the ironies that can be achieved through juxtapositions of image, voice-over text, and music.
Director: Don Levy
![]() |
David Cohen as |
![]() |
Peter Cook as |
![]() |
Alan Daiches as |
![]() |
Charles Gross as |
![]() |
Mark Hendy as |
![]() |
Ian Liddell as |
![]() |
Tim Thompson as |
| Directing | Don Levy | Director |