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Les pirates de la nuit

Original title: Fury at Smugglers' Bay
  • 1961
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 22m
IMDb RATING
5.5/10
302
YOUR RATING
Les pirates de la nuit (1961)
Adventure

Pirate wreckers ravage a small seaside community while the ineffectual local squire tries to discourage his son's romance with a smuggler's pretty daughter.Pirate wreckers ravage a small seaside community while the ineffectual local squire tries to discourage his son's romance with a smuggler's pretty daughter.Pirate wreckers ravage a small seaside community while the ineffectual local squire tries to discourage his son's romance with a smuggler's pretty daughter.

  • Director
    • John Gilling
  • Writer
    • John Gilling
  • Stars
    • Peter Cushing
    • John Fraser
    • Bernard Lee
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.5/10
    302
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • John Gilling
    • Writer
      • John Gilling
    • Stars
      • Peter Cushing
      • John Fraser
      • Bernard Lee
    • 13User reviews
    • 11Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos8

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    Top cast29

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    Peter Cushing
    Peter Cushing
    • Squire Trevenyan
    John Fraser
    John Fraser
    • Christopher Trevenyan
    Bernard Lee
    Bernard Lee
    • Black John
    Michèle Mercier
    Michèle Mercier
    • Louise Lejeune
    June Thorburn
    June Thorburn
    • Jenny Trevenyan
    William Franklyn
    William Franklyn
    • The Captain
    Liz Fraser
    Liz Fraser
    • Betty
    Miles Malleson
    Miles Malleson
    • Duke of Avon
    George Coulouris
    George Coulouris
    • François Lejeune
    Katherine Kath
    • Maman
    Juma
    • Juma, the boy
    Christopher Carlos
    • The Tiger, a pirate
    Tommy Duggan
    • Red Friars
    • (as Thomas Duggan)
    Maitland Moss
    • Tom, the butler
    Humphrey Heathcote
    • Roger Treherne
    Bob Simmons
    Bob Simmons
    • Carlos, a pirate
    James Liggat
    • Sergeant
    Alan Browning
    • 2nd Highwayman
    • Director
      • John Gilling
    • Writer
      • John Gilling
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews13

    5.5302
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    Featured reviews

    6jamesraeburn2003

    "A film with extremely interesting credits that's entertaining while its on, but forgettable afterwards."

    Writer/producer/director John Gilling's story is set in 17th-century Cornwall when fishermen were hit by heavy taxes and turned to smuggling in order to supplement their income. Here, the village squire Trevenyan (Peter Cushing) puts together an army in order to wipe out smuggling from his community. However, the town is terrorised by a group of cut-throats lead by Black John (Bernard Lee) who force ships to land at Smugglers Bay and then ruthlessly murders their crews for the sake of their cargo. Unfortunately, Black John has a hold over Trevenyan and as a result, poor fisherman Francois Lejeune (George Coulouris) is charged for the shipwrecking as well as the smuggling he has done and is to be deported to a foreign colony. The squire's son Christopher (John Fraser) is in love with Lejeune's daughter Louise (Michele Mercier) and teams up with local highwayman known simply as the Captain (William Franklyn) in order to run Black John out of town and to prevent Lejeune's deportation.

    All in all, FURY AT SMUGGLERS' BAY, is well enough done and entertaining enough while its on. I mean who could resist a film with such interesting credits. Bernard Lee as Black John who was soon to become famous as "M" in the Bond series, Peter Cushing as Squire Trevenyan and William Franklyn as the Captain. In addition, there's one of Britain's best known cameramen Harry Waxman behind the camera and John Gilling (an interesting British director who made such classics as THE PLAGUE OF THE ZOMBIES and THE VOICE OF MERRILL) is on hand to direct. Yet somehow after one's seen the film, the next morning there's nothing to remember.
    5kevinolzak

    Peter Cushing and William Franklyn

    1960's "Fury at Smugglers' Bay" was among eight consecutive non horror roles essayed by Peter Cushing in the early 60s, but despite his top billing gets upstaged rather easily by several combative co-stars. Squire Trevenyan (Cushing) rules over a small seaside community in 1789 Cornwall (filmed near Fishguard Wales), seeking to discourage his son's romance with the pretty daughter of law abiding smuggler Francois Lejeune (George Coulouris), while ineffectually dealing with the treacherous Black John (Bernard Lee) and his band of pirate wreckers, luring passing ships to destruction before looting the goods for evil profit. Added to the mix is a rogue highwayman known only as 'The Captain' (William Franklyn), who seems to be in cahoots with Black John, but does what he can to help the persecuted Lejeune. Bernard Lee, recently a heroic pilot opposite Cushing in "Cone of Silence," relishes being cast against type, while the always welcome presence of Hollywood veteran George Coulouris demonstrates how the citizens tried to fight back against the King's malign taxation. Michele Mercier is well known to horror fans for her starring efforts in two Italian titles, 1963's "Black Sabbath" and 1970's "Web of the Spider," with Hammer veteran Miles Malleson granted only one short scene as the Duke of Avon. Peter Cushing enjoyed making this exciting 'British Western,' but his character's strained relationships with both of his children keeps the puzzled audience at a distance, whereas his next Hammer, "Night Creatures" aka "Captain Clegg" would offer him a far more challenging, and thus rewarding, swashbuckling adventure, played with more gusto and a twinkle in the eye. In the future, he would again work with both Bernard Lee ("Frankenstein and the Monster from Hell") and William Franklyn ("The Satanic Rites of Dracula"). This was the movie that Christopher Lee viewed one Saturday afternoon, after which he phoned his old friend Peter: "you rode the horse very well dear fellow, and the expression on your face when you died was exactly the same as it was when you were told what your salary was going to be!"
    4JHC3

    I really wanted to like this film.

    This tale of shipwreckers in rural Cornwall was inspired by the real history of the area. The brutal tradition of shipwrecking has been covered in a number of films and is truly worthwhile subject for dramatization. One would have thought that with a director like John Gilling and a star like Peter Cushing that a well done tragic story would result.

    Peter Cushing plays Squire Trevenyan. The Squire is the sole judge and jury for the area and is periodically backed up by soldiers. His efforts succeed in nabbing a group of smugglers/wreckers, but only provokes more violence. Soon, his beloved son is the target of a kidnapping plot aimed at obtaining freedom for the captured criminals.

    This is truly a well crafted film. It seems to have the makings of an excellent film: strong cast, excellent shooting locations, good cinematography, and strong production values. Unfortunately, the story just didn't grab me. The result was tepid. In fact, "dull" is closer to the mark. Nevertheless, die hard fans of Peter Cushing, John Gilling, or the genre should probably still give it a chance. Perhaps others will see something in it that I missed. I really wanted to like this film, I really did.
    6Bunuel1976

    FURY AT SMUGGLERS' BAY (John Gilling, 1961) **1/2

    The title tells all in this second-rate but enjoyable adventure on a popular subject; star Peter Cushing gives it his all, as ever, and he's matched by a larger-than-life performance by Bernard Lee as the chief villain. Still, Cushing's previous collaboration with writer/director Gilling – THE FLESH AND THE FIENDS (1959) – had proved a lot more substantial (despite being shot in black-and-white).

    Anyway, the remaining cast includes veteran George Coulouris, playing a French merchant convicted by squire Cushing as a wrecker, while John Fraser (in the role of the latter's son) and Michele Mercier (as the Frenchman's daughter) comprise the requisite love interest. Other notable characters to figure in the plot are a mysterious highwayman known only as "The Captain" and a young boy who goes by the name of Juma (also the name of the actor!), both of whom start off by being in cahoots with Lee and his gang but gradually change loyalties to emerge heroic by the film's conclusion. The widescreen print I watched (culled from the Region 2 DVD) displays some color fading but is otherwise pretty decent.

    In the end, when compared to the similar but superior CAPTAIN CLEGG (1962; with Peter Cushing in the title role) – which being a Hammer production is, unsurprisingly, a more horror-oriented venture – this is unassuming family fare; two more films in the same vein I'd love to catch up with (both, incidentally, Hammer titles co-starring Christopher Lee) but which have never turned up in my neck of the woods are PIRATES OF BLOOD RIVER (1962; also directed by Gilling) and THE DEVIL-SHIP PIRATES (1964)...
    6ldeangelis-75708

    Not Bad For Passing the time

    While far from perfect, this is one of those films that's good for a hanging around kind of day, where you need something to fill the time.

    It was also nice to see Peter Cushing play someone other than Dr. Van Helsing and battling smugglers rather than vampires. Though he could have saved himself a lot of trouble if he had confessed his secret, rather than submit to blackmail. (It's funny, how back then - 18thc - it would have been a real scandal, whereas today no one would blink an eye. But is that really progress?)

    It's not a bad drama/adventure film, (with some romance thrown in), as long as you don't expect too much.

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    Related interests

    Still frame
    Adventure

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      During location filming in South Wales, the film-makers were obliged to disguise telegraph poles as palm trees (which are rare in Britain).
    • Quotes

      François Lejeune: What should I tell him, Red? Should I tell the noble squire that the wreckers are interfering with the rights of honest smugglers like ourselves?

    • Soundtracks
      Jolly John
      (uncredited)

      Music by Harold Geller

      Lyrics by Tommie Connor

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • October 17, 1962 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Zaliv Krijumcara
    • Filming locations
      • Abereiddy, Pembrokeshire, Wales, UK(Penparc, St Nicholas, Pembrokeshire, Wales, UK)
    • Production companies
      • John Gilling Enterprises
      • Mijo Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 22m(82 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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