Christopher Robbie, born in 1938, is a British actor known for his diverse talents across theatre and film. He appears in Sudden Terror (1970), where his performance contributes to the film's unsettling atmosphere. Robbie trained at RADA in London and has a rich theatrical background, including a notable stint with the Royal Shakespeare Company. His extensive experience in various roles enhances the cult-film conversation, making his work in Sudden Terror a noteworthy exploration of suspense and tension.
Sudden Terror
Living on the island of Malta, Ziggy (Mark Lester, Crossed Swords) is an 11-year-old boy with an overactive imagination and a habit of telling wild lies. But when he sees the brutal assassination of a visiting African president by two rogue policemen, nobody will believe his story. Can Ziggy convince anybody that he is telling the truth before the psychotic cops are able to hunt down and murder the only eyewitness? This is no ordinary boy-who-cried-wolf story. Legendary director John Hough (Twins of Evil, The Legend of Hell House) packs Sudden Terror with plenty of tense style, stunning locations and startling violence. Susan George (Straw Dogs), Lionel Jeffries (The Quatermass Xperiment), Jeremy Kemp (The Blue Max), Peter Vaughan (Game of Thrones), Peter Bowles (The Offence) and Tony Bonner (Quigley Down Under) co-star in this shocking and terrifying suspense-thriller featuring music by legendary British art-rock bands Fairfield Parlour and Van der Graaf Generator.