Film Review
Fired by Colmbia after a fierce falling out over
The Garment Jungle, director Robert
Aldrich found himself in exile in Britain for his next two films, both
wartime thrillers. After helming Hammer's
Ten Seconds to Hell (1959), he was
invited to direct
The Angry Hills
by independent producer Raymond Stross. Aldrich was pleased with
neither film and regarded this period as one of the low points of his
career, although both films stand up remarkably well today, mainly
because they tacitly avoid the clichés that are often found in
war movies of this era.
The one weakness that
The Angry Hills
does have is a plot that lacks substance and momentum, leaving the star
Robert Mitchum looking like a tired passenger for much of the
film. This failing is at least partly compensated for by the
atmospheric film noir-style cinematography (the night sequences are
particularly effective) and some respectable turns from the supporting
cast. Stanley Baker gets the most interesting role, a Gestapo
officer coping with divided loyalties, and offers a far more complex
and interesting portrayal of a Nazi than the more conventional one
supplied by Marius Goring, who combines the camp and the sinister with
worrying ease.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Robert Aldrich film:
What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? (1962)
Film Synopsis
An American journalist Mike Morrison arrives in Athens just as the
Allies are about to pull out on the eve of a full-scale Nazi invasion
of Greece. Morrison is immediately contacted by an agent named Dr
Stergion who offers him a large bounty if he will deliver a piece of
paper to British Intelligence. The paper has on it a list of
names of several Greek collaborators who are willing to work as spies
for the Allies. Before Morrison can hand over the list, his cover
is blown and he escapes in a British convoy just before the Nazis take
the Greek capital by force. Rescued by fishermen, Morrison finds
himself in a small village in the hills outside Athens. Aware of
the threat that Morrison poses, Gestapo agent Conrad Heisler sends
German troops into the hills to hunt him down...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.