IMDb RATING
7.2/10
4.3K
YOUR RATING
A rookie trucker tries to expose his boss' rackets.A rookie trucker tries to expose his boss' rackets.A rookie trucker tries to expose his boss' rackets.
- Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
- 1 nomination total
‘Snow White’ Stars Test Their Wits
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaAlthough Stanley Baker had played major supporting roles in movies to great acclaim for several years, this was the first time he played the leading role in a movie.
- GoofsDuring the fight between Tom and Red, Red's cigarette drops from his mouth to the floor, but it is back in his mouth in the next shot.
- Quotes
Lucy, Hawlett Trucking Secretary: You think I'm flinging myself at you, don't you?
Tom Yately: You're doing a fair imitation.
- ConnectionsEdited into Interpol Calling (1959)
Featured review
This film is a remarkably unsentimental look at life for the less fortunate in post-war Britain. There are no tour-de-force performances, but this is not a film that demands them. A group of down on their luck men, finding work, love and friendship where they can, do what they have to do to earn enough money to keep them from crime (more or less), particularly when faced by venal employers who cheat and lie to them daily. There is no union for these men, no legal recourse, no Health and Safety Executive, they have nothing except themselves and the tenuous camaraderie they forge in the down and out bed and breakfasts they have to live in. Driving trucks to ferry gravel from a quarry to a building site, they cut every corner and take their own, and every other road user's, life in their hands as they struggle to get that one more run, that might get them one more pint in the pub. A veritable "who's going to be who" of British actors - Sean Connery, David McCallum, Herbert Lom (okay, Czech, but work with me...), William Hartnell (far from the lovable Dr Who), Stanley Baker, Patrick McGoohan and Sid James (in a rare straight role) all grimly play men on edge pushed to their limits - and sometimes beyond.
Oh yes - until 1965, there were no speed limits on British roads outside urban areas, which in some respects explains the lack of police.
Oh yes - until 1965, there were no speed limits on British roads outside urban areas, which in some respects explains the lack of police.
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Hell Drivers
- Filming locations
- Blue Circle Cement Works - disused, Steyning Road, Upper Beeding, West Sussex, England, UK(Red's lorry crashes into the quarry)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 48 minutes
- Color
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