Hell Drivers
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Cy Endfield
Stanley Baker
Herbert Lom
Peggy Cummins
Patrick Mcgoohan
William Hartnell
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
An ex-con tries to go clean and gets a job working as a truck driver, when he discovers that his peers in the union are scamming money by creating phantom drivers on the payroll and splitting the extra cash amongst themselves.
Director
Cy Endfield
Cast
Stanley Baker
Herbert Lom
Peggy Cummins
Patrick Mcgoohan
William Hartnell
Wilfrid Lawson
Sidney James
Jill Ireland
Alfie Bass
Gordon Jackson
David Mccallum
Sean Connery
Wensley Pithey
George Murcell
Marjorie Rhodes
Vera Day
Beatrice Varley
Robin Bailey
Jean St. Clair
Jerry Stovin
John Horsley
Marianne Stone
Ronald Clarke
Crew
Arthur Alcott
Ernest Archer
Yvonne Caffin
Hubert Clifford
Bill Daniels
Cy Endfield
S. Benjamin Fisz
Jim Groom
John D. Guthridge
Stanley Hosgood
Ian Jeayes
Bill Kirby
John Kruse
John Kruse
Robert T. Macphee
W. T. Partleton
Stella Rivers
Earl St. John
Arthur Taksen
Geoffrey Unsworth
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Hell Drivers (1957)
Soon, Joe finds himself squaring off with the lead driver, a borderline psychopath named Red (Patrick McGoohan). Baker's gift for understatement generates considerable tension when paired with McGoohan's primal viciousness. Eventually, Joe and Red's distaste for each other leads to a violent but satisfying showdown.
Oddly enough, Hell Drivers was a breeding ground for future TV and motion picture spies. McGoohan went on to star in a BBC series called Danger Man. (It also aired for one season in the U.S., although Americans mostly remember its Johnny Rivers-sung theme song, Secret Agent Man). A young actor named Sean Connery - later, of course, to gain worldwide fame as James Bond - can be seen as one of the truckers that gives Baker a hard time. And, last but not least, Baker's brother is played by David McCallum, the fair-haired super-spy from The Man from U.N.C.L.E..)
Herbert Lom, who co-starred as Inspector Dreyfuss in Blake Edwards' Pink Panther movies, also appears as one of the truckers. But Dreyfuss, for his part, secretly fought Inspector Clouseau, rather than enemy agents.
Director Cy Endfield was a South African who got his start in Hollywood directing short subjects at MGM and later B-movies for Monogram. Unfortunately, his filmmaking career in the U.S. was cut short when he was identified as a communist by the House Un-American Activities Committee in 1951. Industry blacklisting forced him to relocate to England where he eventually rebuilt his career in the early sixties, forming a production company with Stanley Baker; Zulu (1964) and Sands of the Kalahari (1965) were their best-known films.
Directed by: Cy Endfield
Producer: Benjamin Fisz
Screenplay: Cy Endfield and John Kruse
Cinematography: Geoffrey Unsworth
Editing: John D. Guthridge
Music: Hubert Clifford
Art Direction: Ernest Archer
Costume Design: Yvonne Caffin
Cast: Stanley Baker (Tom/Joe Yately), Patrick McGoohan (Red), David McCallum (Jimmy), Herbert Lom (Gino), Sean Connery (Johnny), Jill Ireland (Jill).
C-104m.
by Paul Tatara
Hell Drivers (1957)
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States 1958
Released in United States 1997
Shown at Vancouver International Film Festival (Pre-Millenial Tension) September 26 - October 12, 1997.
VistaVision
Released in United States 1958
Released in United States 1997 (Shown at Vancouver International Film Festival (Pre-Millenial Tension) September 26 - October 12, 1997.)