Hell's Five Hours (1958) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
7 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
Taut hostage thriller proves eerie preview of catastrophes to come...
bmacv14 March 2005
Released in the late '50s when paranoia about thermonuclear annihilation was running rampant through America, Hell's Five Hours looks not at Communist operators but at a disturbed individual with access to one installation of the nation's military-industrial complex. It's set at night, in cozy Meritville, a little town whose chief employer is a huge and ominous rocket-fuel plant (in an expressionist touch, it registers as a looming bank of lights in the dark distance).

When a disgruntled worker (Vic Morrow) gets fired, he straps dynamite around his chest activated by a mercury-switch detonator – if he topples over (from a rifle shot, say), the bomb goes off anyway. (It's Morrow's own appropriation of the Doomsday Machine.) His goal (which "voices" told him to accomplish) is nothing less than igniting a catastrophic explosion that will flatten the town and unleash clouds of deadly cyanide gas.

When his first attempt to break into the plant undetected goes awry, Morrow – slinging a corn-pone drawl patterned after the late James Dean – realizes that he'll need some unwilling accomplices. So he turns up at the house of the plant's chief engineer (Stephen McNally), abducting his wife (Colleen Gray) and son. He then tears back to the plant, with Gray his hostage.

The only movie ever made by Jack L. Copeland (who wrote, produced and directed), Hell's Five Hours is little more than a prolonged standoff between Morrow and McNally's forces, but it abounds with deft touches. Those that aren't so deft leave clues as to how society during the second Eisenhower administration was portrayed on contemporary film. (Atop one of the massive fuel tanks, which supposedly has a weak roof, Morrow orders Gray to test its strength by walking across it; so she does, in the same pair of high heels she had been wearing, late in the evening, at home.) With its premise a deranged terrorist stalking a sleepy, complacent hamlet in dead of night, with plans to kindle Armageddon, Hell's Five Hours stands as an uneasy preview of events that would occur years later: Three Mile Island, Bhopal, even 9/11. In 1958, it may have been received as alarmist; today, we, alas, know better.
20 out of 25 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
chills to the bone
myriamlenys27 November 2019
Warning: Spoilers
A taut thriller, "Hell's Five Hours" chills to the bone, by telling a tale about a disgruntled ex-employee planning revenge on the last place he worked, to wit a giant military plant lying next to an unremarkable and unsuspecting town. In doing so, the movie points out that it might not be a good idea to build a hugely dangerous installation next to an unremarkable and unsuspecting town. Sadly enough, later environmental disasters such as "Seveso" have proven the truth of this assertion.

Sadly for all concerned the movie was also eerily predictive in another regard : nowadays, the USA has become infamous for disgruntled employees or students expressing themselves by killing scores of unsuspecting people. This unlovely distinction seems to spring not from some fault in the American national temperament, but rather from a surprisingly lax legislation which allows any unstable person with a grudge to amass enough heavy-duty weaponry to start a war. In other countries a nasty nineteen-year-old wanting to punish his university might be carrying a knife and a cosh ; in the USA, his equivalent might be carrying a machine gun, five advanced sniper rifles and a bazooka. Try as I might, I have never understood why such an egregious scandal is allowed to go unchecked, especially since many of the victims represent the hope and flower of their nation.

But to return to the movie : "Hell's Five Hours" could have used better characterizations, but it's notable for the cleverness and originality of its plot and for the continuing pertinence of its warning. Should be made into mandatory viewing for all persons responsible for environmental and spatial planning issues related to potentially dangerous plants such as chemical plants or nuclear installations.
3 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Give Me the Re-Write Department
dballtwo16 November 2021
Despite its mighty earnestness, proclaimed during a prelude sequence of several rocket launches, "H5H" founders on the implausibilities that abound in Jack Copeland's script, which is just way too ambitious for his budget. On the one hand, the story is centered on a rocket fuel plant that's alleged to be one of the most dangerously explosive and smelly in America; on the other hand, the security arrangements at this installation look to be about worthy of a 7-11. They are easily surmounted by a semi-literate hillbilly maniac, who also has figured out during a few idle minutes how to build a mercury-switch-activated dynamite bomb. And then the fun begins. Stephen McNally, Coleen Gray , and Vic Morrow do their best but they are several cuts above the rest of the ensemble.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
A disgruntled former employee with a gun. Who would believe it?
mark.waltz31 December 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Add Vic Morrow to the list of memorable psycho villains in this very good thriller that deals with an employee who was fired for smoking in a non-smoking area at a rocket fuel plant and seeks revenge by committing suicide and blowing the plant up at the same time. Stephen McNally is the plant owner and moral chooses to victimize his family, taking his wife (Coleen Gray) and son hostage, and threatening to blow the surrounding area off the face of the Earth. This creates an evacuation and it's while they are getting ready to leave that Morrow arrives much to Gray's horror.

Fraught with tension, this well done programmer from the last years of the double feature will keep you on edge even though it's pretty obvious what will happen in the conclusion. There were a lot of movies about disgruntled men as well as families being taken hostage, and this is indeed the beginning of some desperate hours. Morrow is excellent, his natural edginess perfect for this part. Gray here seems quite frightened when she's walking on the roof of the plan on a very thin layer of tin, fearing she might fall through. The use of black-and-white is perfect for a film like this, and technically, it is superb. A decent length doesn't overextend this, and the tension never subsides.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
One Star for how Vic looks, not how he talks
QueenoftheGoons26 July 2021
6 reasons why this movie was beyond trash: 1. It was like a documentary 2. Poor cast 3. Vic while easy on the eyes, had the worst fake Donald Duck voice ever 4. McNally is NOT a family man, he's always a villian 5. Was slightly tolerable so long as no one spoke 6. Just trash, why didn't they get a hick to play Vic's part OR let Vic talk in his Bronx voice that he always had?

Just an awful movie. I noticed already Vic was having problems breathing. If he hadn't of died as he did, he would have died of emphysema and lung cancer quick.

He swags when he runs too. He is the only actor, along with Mickey Rourke to swag and get away with it.
1 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Powerful, compact nailbiter, a Vic Morrow showcase.
Hup234!22 October 1999
I saw "Hell's Five Hours" in theatrical release, and I recall that it actually drew audience applause at its conclusion. Vic Morrow, three years after "Blackboard Jungle", is perfectly cast. The film exhibits the tautness and grittiness evident in Allied Artists releases of the period. It's reminiscent, of course, to "White Heat" in its tank-farm setting; but "Hell's Five Hours" stands firmly on its own, and will definitely hold your attention as the seconds tick away. Highly recommended to all.
12 out of 16 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Excitment seventy three minutes
searchanddestroy-130 March 2023
Maybe Stephen McNally could have played Vic Morrow's character and Morrow McNally's role. Why not? Anyway this film noir thriller is more than worth. Exciting, tense, fast paced, full of suspense, I am sure it was not very known and that's certainly not now it will be shown much. Vic Morrow is really at his top, far better than in BLACKBOARD JUNGLE. It could remind some kind of Andrew Stone's films topic. Hostage scheme with much suspense; remember NIGHT HOLDS TERROR, CRY TERROR, with some disaster elements.... In the seventies we'll find several films, including TV stuff, using this material. No, really, this movie is worth watching, at least for Vic Morrow absolutely incerdible.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed