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Traitor's Gate
Barnes and Noble
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Traitor's Gate in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $11.49

Barnes and Noble
Traitor's Gate in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $11.49
Loading Inventory...
Size: OS
Though based on an Edgar Wallace novel,
Traitor's Gate
was not part of the long-running British series of second features based on the works of Wallace. Albert Lieven plays a London businessman who doubles as a high-tech crook. He organizes an elite gang of thieves to steal the crown jewels. Their escape at sea is complicated by the rivalry between Lieven and his brother Gary Raymond.
provides an interesting contrast to
The Jokers
(67), a "mod" comedy in which another pair of brothers pilfer the crown jewels.
Traitor's Gate
was not part of the long-running British series of second features based on the works of Wallace. Albert Lieven plays a London businessman who doubles as a high-tech crook. He organizes an elite gang of thieves to steal the crown jewels. Their escape at sea is complicated by the rivalry between Lieven and his brother Gary Raymond.
provides an interesting contrast to
The Jokers
(67), a "mod" comedy in which another pair of brothers pilfer the crown jewels.
Though based on an Edgar Wallace novel,
Traitor's Gate
was not part of the long-running British series of second features based on the works of Wallace. Albert Lieven plays a London businessman who doubles as a high-tech crook. He organizes an elite gang of thieves to steal the crown jewels. Their escape at sea is complicated by the rivalry between Lieven and his brother Gary Raymond.
provides an interesting contrast to
The Jokers
(67), a "mod" comedy in which another pair of brothers pilfer the crown jewels.
Traitor's Gate
was not part of the long-running British series of second features based on the works of Wallace. Albert Lieven plays a London businessman who doubles as a high-tech crook. He organizes an elite gang of thieves to steal the crown jewels. Their escape at sea is complicated by the rivalry between Lieven and his brother Gary Raymond.
provides an interesting contrast to
The Jokers
(67), a "mod" comedy in which another pair of brothers pilfer the crown jewels.

















