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Hell Is a City

Murder money stained his hands....
1960 | 98m | English

(1714 votes)

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Popularity: 0.9 (history)

Director: Val Guest
Writer: Maurice Procter, Val Guest
Staring:
Details

Set in Manchester, heartland of England's industrial north, Don Starling escapes from jail becoming England's most wanted man. Ruthless villain Starling together with his cronies engineered a robbery that resulted in the violent death of a young girl. Detective Inspector Martineau has been assigned to hunt him down and bring him in. From seedy barrooms, through gambling dens the trail leads to an explosive climax high on the rooftops of the city.
Release Date: Apr 10, 1960
Director: Val Guest
Writer: Maurice Procter, Val Guest
Genres: Crime, Thriller
Keywords robbery, based on novel or book, northern england, police, film noir, murder, fugitive, black and white, police inspector, hammerscope
Production Companies Hammer Film Productions
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Feb 07, 2026
Entered: Apr 20, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
Stanley Baker Insp. Harry Martineau
John Crawford Don Starling
Donald Pleasence Gus Hawkins
Maxine Audley Julia Martineau
Billie Whitelaw Chloe Hawkins
Joseph Tomelty Furnisher Steele
George A. Cooper Doug Savage
Vanda Godsell Lucretia Luske
Dickie Owen Bragg
Alister Williamson Sam
Lois Daine Cecily Wainwright
John Harvey Fingerprint Officer
Geoffrey Frederick Det. Devery
Charles Houston Clogger Roach
Joby Blanshard Tawny Jakes
Charles Morgan Laurie Lovett
Peter Madden Bert Darwin
Warren Mitchell Commercial Traveller
Sarah Branch Silver Steele
Russell Napier Superintendent
Philip Bond Headquarters PC (uncredited)
Richard Coleman Detective in Station (uncredited)
John Comer Plainclothes Police Driver (uncredited)
Doris Speed Older Sister in Hospital (uncredited)
Marianne Stone (uncredited)
Reg Thomason Barman (uncredited)
Name Job
Arthur Grant Director of Photography
Maurice Procter Novel
Colin Garde Makeup Artist
Don Weeks Production Manager
James Needs Editor
Robert Lennard Casting
Robert Jones Art Direction
Pauline Trent Hairstylist
Val Guest Director, Screenplay
Stanley Black Original Music Composer
Name Title
Michael Carreras Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


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2024 5 7 12 3
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Reviews

John Chard
9.0

I don't play cards. I don't even touch coins. Out of Hammer Films, Hell is a City is directed by Val Guest, who also adapts the screenplay from Maurice Proctor's novel of the same name. It stars Stanley Baker, John Crawford, Billie Whitelaw, Maxine Audley, Donald Pleasence, Vanda Godsell, Joseph ... Tomelty and George A. Cooper. Music is by Stanley Black and cinematography in HammerScope is by Arthur Grant. When violent criminal Don Starling (Crawford) escapes from prison, Manchester cop Inspector Harry Martineau (Baker) correctly assumes he is on his way back to the area to collect some hidden loot from a previous job. Sure enough a serious crime rocks the city and all roads lead to Starling, but what price will Martineau pay to nail a man whose mere name strikes fear into the locals? Has some bastard been passing me snide money? British crime drama at its best, absorbing as a suspense tale, clinically unflinching in its characterisations and directed with a deft hand by the multi talented Val Guest. "Hell is a City" is without question a very British movie, but in the same way that greats like "Brighton Rock" and "They made Me A Fugitive" are "Britannia Rule Grimarannia", so it be here where Guest makes the most of Manchester's gloomy locales to pump bad blood into the edgy narrative. It's a Manchester of creaky terraced houses, working class bars, soiled streets and the unforgiving Moors. The latter of which a visual beauty to the eye, but home of misery both in fact and fiction. A Starling in the Attic. Tale unfolds as a sort of warts and all semi-documentary police procedural. Harry Martineau is the lead man, but this is no cliché addled copper, he is a tough bastard who is not adverse to using strong arm and dishonest tactics to get results. He's a hero, of sorts, but the happiness he craves outside of his work, at home, is moving further away from him. He's not alone, either, for many of the vivid characters on show here are either life's losers, illicit gamblers, unfaithful wives, lonely hearts, or cheaters and beaters, and that's before we get to Crawford's villain. Don Starling infects everyone with his evil stink, a robber, a rapist and a murderer, he may not look much physically in Crawford's shoes, but his name, voice and mere appearance has all but Martineau in a cold sweat. If a man ain't got kids he's still fair game! The script is devoid of pointless filler and no scene is wasted, there's an air of realism throughout. Sure there's a little leap of faith to be taken at times, but nothing that remotely could hurt the movie. The performances are from the better end of the scale, with Baker excelling as a stoic but lonely man of the force, and Whitelaw and Godsell impressively force themselves up above the parapet to be rightly noticed in a movie predominantly beefed by machismo. Could Don Starling have been played by a better actor? Yes of course. Or just have been played by someone more menacing in appearance (like Baker in his villain roles for instance)? Again, yes of course. But the more you watch the more you will see that it's a frightening portrayal because it's very human, just like that given to Harry Martineau. Some scenes shock and distress, others hold you and enthral, "Hell is a City" is one hell of a film and highly recommended to crime and noir fans. 9/10

May 16, 2024
Geronimo1967
7.0

For a second I thought that Joan Crawford was in this, then I realised that it was her long-lost cousin John who takes on the role of visiting American box-office draw for this gritty and quite well thought-out crime drama. You see, “Starling” has broken out of a prison in Manchester and local polic ... e inspector “Martineau” (Stanley Baker) is convinced that he will return to his old stomping grounds to settle old scores and to collect his share of the loot from the job that sent him down in the first place. Just to add to the complexities of his case, “Martineau” is having martial difficulties with his wife “Julia” (Maxine Audley) who is bored witless at home all the time whilst he is out playing cops and robbers, and there is also the murder of a young woman to look into too. Might they be connected? Well after some conversations with the slightly dodgy looking “Gus” (Donald Pleasence) for whom the victim worked, he becomes convinced that there is a connection and that this might be his lead to track down the elusive “Starling”, his gang and his stolen cash, too. I never found Baker to be the most engaging or versatile of actors, but he delivers quite well here as Val Guest ensures we hit the ground running and stay moving along quite intriguingly for ninety minutes. Crawford doesn’t actually feature that much until the end, but Pleasence does the sweaty-palm merchant really quite well meantime and there’s also an extra degree of frenzy provided by Lois Daine as the mute “Cecily” who finds herself embroiled in these shenanigans as things start to get desperate. The last ten minutes are all a bit set-piece but are excitingly filmed nonetheless as we take to the rooftops, and in some ways it did remind me of Jack Hawkins’s pretty decent “Gideon of Scotland Yard” (1958). It is a solid adventure worth a watch.

Jul 17, 2025