The Hellfire Club (1961) Directed by Robert S. Baker, Monty Berman
Action / Adventure / History / Romance / Comedy
Film Review
Far less racy than its title would suggest, The Hellfire Club is a fairly
respectable swashbuckler from the stable of Robert S. Baker and Monty
Berman, one of Britain's most successful filmmaking partnerships in the
1950s and 60s. Colourful (to the point of retina-scarringly
garish) and well-paced, with a liberal smattering of humour, this is
one of the more enjoyable offerings in a once hugely popular genre, its
low-key story enlivened by a charismatic cast and some marvellously
staged fight sequences. Keith Michell revels in the role of the
hyperactive hero, looking frighteningly like a slightly camp version of
Jean Marais as he leaps from one set-piece brawl to another, taking
time out to amuse himself with the occasional redheaded lovely (fancy
being torn between Adrienne Corri and Kai Fischer...) Peter
Cushing makes a brief appearance as a kindly lawyer who may not be what
he seems (ending the film with a line that 99.9 per cent of the
audience will fail to comprehend), but the central baddy is Peter Arne,
superbly villainous as a woman-beating fiend who practices debauchery,
depravity and devil worship (but not, alas, in a way that would ever
upset the British film censor). The
Hellfire Club may not live up to its name, but it is still
rollicking good fun, worth seeing for Michell's outrageously camp
impersonation of a French nobleman.
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Film Synopsis
England, 1752. Lord Netherden is a member of the infamous
Hellfire Club, an exclusive gentleman's club which is notorious for its
depravity, debauchery and devil worship. One day, Netherden's
satanic exploits are witnessed by his young son Jason, who flees in
terror at what he sees. Unable to bear her husband's tyranny any
more, Netherden's wife leaves the family home with her son, but soon
runs into Netherden and his men. Although Jason escapes with his
life, his mother perishes. 15 years later, Jason is happy earning
a living as an acrobat with a troupe in Holland. When he learns
that his cousin Thomas as inherited his father's estate, Jason makes up
his mind to go to England and prove that he is the rightful heir.
In London, he finds a lawyer, Merryweather, who is willing to support
his claim, but first he must recover a stolen document which leaves no
doubt that he is the rightful heir to the Netherden estate. Jason
deduces that Thomas has stolen the document, and to recover it he must
find a way to inveigle his way into his cousin's household.
Unfortunately, Jason is up against a formidable opponent, as the
Hellfire Club is the power behind the throne of King George II...
Cast: Keith Michell (Jason),
Adrienne Corri (Isobel),
Peter Cushing (Merryweather),
Peter Arne (Thomas),
Kai Fischer (Yvonne),
David Lodge (Timothy),
Bill Owen (Martin),
Miles Malleson (Judge),
Martin Stephens (Jason as a Boy),
Andrew Faulds (Lord Netherden),
Jean Lodge (Lady Netherden),
Francis Matthews (Sir Hugh Manning),
Desmond Walter-Ellis (Lord Chorley),
Denis Shaw (Sir Richard),
Tutte Lemkow (Higgins),
Rupert Osborne (Thomas as a Boy),
Skip Martin (Joel),
Peter Howell (William Pitt),
George Street (Landlord),
John Scott (Prison Sergeant)
Country: UK
Language: English
Support: Color
Runtime: 90 min
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