Robert Hartford-Davis Movies
Robert Hartford-Davis was one of England's more successful exploitation filmmakers of the postwar era, and among the first notable figures in that field to come out of British television. Along with his younger contemporaries Piers Haggard, Jeremy Summers, and Michael Reeves, he was a mainstay of action, horror, and exploitation cinema in England during the '60s and '70s.Born in Kent, England in 1923, Hartford-Davis studied at the Corona Dramatic Academy. It was during a visit, at age 14, to Warner Bros.' Teddington Studios, however, that he decided that he would someday be a movie director. He entered the industry as a focus-puller and camera operator at British National and other studios before and during the Second World War, and then moved to the editing room. He later made documentary releases for the Film Producers Guild and served as an assistant to such visiting American filmmakers as John Huston and King Vidor during the '50s. He became a television director during the middle of that decade, working on such series as I'm Not Bothered, Robin Hood, Mark Saber, and Police Surgeon, and broke into feature films at the start of the '60s with the crime thriller Crosstrap (1961). He followed this up in 1963 with The Yellow Teddybears, a fact-based and then-shocking movie about teenage schoolgirls losing their virginity; that film brought Hartford-Davis into the orbit of exploitation producer and distributor Tony Tenser, through whom he also came to direct Saturday Night Out. The latter, a rather less controversial exploitation drama starring Bernard Lee and featuring the Searchers (after the Beatles reportedly passed on the chance to appear in it), is now regarded as a classic artifact from the early era of "swinging London." It was also through Tenser that Hartford-Davis made the lurid costume drama The Black Torment (1964), which established him firmly (and one might say permanently) in the exploitation field. Hartford-Davis left Tenser's orbit after completing that movie and entered a partnership with Peter Newbrook, forming Titan International Films. It was through that company that Hartford-Davis produced and directed Gonks Go Beat (1965), one of the stranger and notably bad pieces of rock & roll cinema to come out of England. It was also notable for its ambitious mixing of genres and the presence (mostly wasted) of such serious musical luminaries as the Graham Bond Organization. Hartford-Davis returned to more restrained and sophisticated subjects with The Sandwich Man (1966) (aka That Swinging City), an interesting and entertaining slice-of-life drama. But by the following year he was back in his comfortably lurid milieu with Corruption (1967), a story of medical practice-turned-serial murder starring Peter Cushing and Sue Lloyd, set against the backdrop of swinging London. After that, Hartford-Davis seldom strayed from the realms of crime and sex, helming School for Unclaimed Girls (1969) and Incense for the Damned (1971) (aka The Bloodsuckers). He then went to Hollywood to make Black Gunn (1972), starring Jim Brown, and The Take (1974) starring Billy Dee Williams, blaxploitation films that opened what promised to be a new chapter in Hartford-Davis' career, earning him awards as Best Action Director by the International European Critics in 1973-1974. He'd returned to Hollywood by the middle of the decade and was employed in television productions, including two episodes of the critically acclaimed and Emmy-favored Family and one episode of the short-lived Dog and Cat. Hartford-Davis had finished three days work on his fourth assignment, the made-for-television feature Murder in Peyton Place, when he was felled by a massive heart attack in his home. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
This violent blaxploitation film stars Jim Brown as the owner of a Los Angeles nightclub. When his brother, a Vietnam veteran, is murdered by gangsters, Brown gathers some of his brother's fellow veterans and an assortment of ex-convicts to get brutal revenge. Martin Landau, Luciana Paluzzi, and Jeannie Bell head the cast, along with genre regulars Bruce Glover, Bernie Casey, and Gary Conway. Director Robert Hartford-Davis is best known for horror films like Incense of the Damned and Corruption, while Brown went on to more successful genre fare in Slaughter and Slaughter's Big Rip-Off. ~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide

- 1971
- R
- Add The Fiend to Queue
An emotionally disturbed cult member loses grip on his sanity and sets off on a killing spree. ~ Iotis Erlewine, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Tony Beckley, Patrick Magee, (more)
This badly-dated but interesting variant on the vampire subgenre is loosely based on the Simon Raven novel Doctors Wear Scarlet. The story details the seduction of an Oxford resident (Patrick Mower) into a satanic vampire society while studying in Greece. The chief twist here is that vampirism is treated not as a supernatural affliction, but as a bizarre form of sexual gratification -- an alternative lifestyle in which Mower is soon immersed, thanks to the manipulations of an exotic Greek siren. After some silly scenes featuring a lot of groovin' hippie orgies and silly psychedelic lighting effects, Mower returns to England to continue his sanguinary obsession in earnest, focusing his bloodthirsty desires on his prudish fiancee -- who is not so willing to embrace this new lifestyle. Despite the aforementioned painful attempts at hipness, this film shapes up to be an effective thriller -- perhaps the first to put a psychological spin on the vampire pantheon. Peter Cushing and Patrick Macnee are on hand in very small but effective supporting roles. Released also under the more "trendy" title Incense for the Damned. ~ Cavett Binion, All Movie Guide
In this thriller, a British lord and his lady attempt to stay alive after their estate is invaded by a psychopathic killer. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
In this timely melodrama, a young man encounters psychological problems when he tries to deal with his brother's death. Alan Evans (Gordon Thomson) seeks counseling when his brother Peter (Robin Ward) is killed in Vietnam. Their pompous and patriotic father (Cec Linder) talks the boy into fulfilling his military obligations that result in his ultimate demise. The troubled Alan goes to Vancouver to escape the fate of his brother. Dr. Neal (Richard Conte) is the dedicated psychiatrist who tries to help Alan deal with his feelings of helplessness and rage. Alan meets Richie Kovacs (Don Stroud), the expatriate draft dodger who carries a grudge against society and is not afraid to reveal his open hostilities, and the two take different paths in dealing with their problems. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Don Stroud, Michelle Chicoine, (more)
Nicki (Madeline Hinde) is a troubled teenage girl who feels guilty about her father's death. Her mother Anne (Renee Asherson) is a lonely woman who falls for opportunistic loafer Harry (Patrick Mower). When Harry tries to rape Nicki, she stabs him with a pair of scissors. Nicki is sent to a home for wayward girls where she becomes even more withdrawn. She is seduced by a lesbian and the two manage to escape the facility. They take temporary refuge with an old boyfriend and remain wanted criminals in this routine melodrama. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Madeline Hinde, Renée Ashershon, (more)
A guilt-ridden plastic surgeon becomes murderously obsessed with restoring the beautiful face of his fashion-model fiancee in this horror film. It was he, in a jealous rage, who accidentally disfigured her, when he burst into a photography session, got into a fight with the cameraman and ended up burning her face with a hot lamp. Now, desperate to restore her, he begins harvesting the pituitary glands and the facial skin (removed with a laser) from the severed heads of prostitutes and using them on her wounded face. It works, but they pay a price and both become increasingly insane because the "beauty treatment" is only temporary. One day, an angry band of hippies storms the doctor's house, for he has killed one of their friends. Using his deadly laser, the doctor tries to defend himself, but the laser goes out of control causing all sorts of death and gory destruction. Fortunately, things are not as they seem, and at that point the surgeon awakens from his nightmare and prepares to take his beautiful fiancee to a party. The promo posters for the film advertised "This Is Not a Woman's Picture! No women will be allowed in alone!" ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Peter Cushing, Sue Lloyd, (more)
In this English comedy, the trouble begins when a bumbling young man embarrasses his grandfather, the British Prime Minister, by selling newspapers on a street corner. Soon the fellow finds himself given a reporter's job and sent to cover a story in a tiny coastal village. There he soon finds himself entangled in a massive scandal. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Norman Wisdom, Derek Bond, (more)
Horace Quilby (Michael Bentine) is a sandwich-board advertising man who gets a tour of London and sees some of the city's most offbeat and outrageous characters in this situation comedy. British blonde bombshell (Diana Dors) co-stars. Watch for Michael Chaplin (son of Charlie) as a beatnik artist. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Michael Bentine, Dora Bryan, (more)
This rock comedy features an alien who tries to distribute peace, love and understanding around Britain. ~ All Movie Guide
This staid British thriller stars John Turner as 18th-century nobleman Sir John Fordyce, whose blissful honeymoon holiday is cut brutally short by angry locals who accuse him of raping a woman from the village. Worse, they claim to have seen the ghost of his first wife riding through town on horseback, shrieking that she had died by her husband's hand. Despite Sir John's protestations of innocence, the hand of fate seems to be closing in, as more violent acts are perpetrated -- including the death of his father -- and his new bride (Heather Sears) is prepared to shoot him dead if he comes near her. All is revealed in the contrived climax -- which plays out like a Gothic version of a "Scooby-Doo" episode. The filmmakers tried to punch things up with a plethora of cheap spook-house gimmicks but fail to disguise the threadbare plot. ~ Cavett Binion, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- John Turner, Heather Sears, (more)
This British comedy details what happens to five sailors and a passenger as they spend fifteen hours on shore leave in London while waiting for their cargo ship to unload. The passenger, a lonely widowed business man named George (Bernard Lee), finds his way to a West End bar, where he meets Wanda (Erika Remberg), a seductive blackmailer, working in cahoots with photographer Paul (Derek Bond). Meanwhile, Lee (John Bonney), an Australian sailor, meets and falls in love with wacky beatnik Penny (Heather Sears). Arthur (David Lodge) tells the sailors that he is going to visit his mother when, in reality, he is heading off to seek a prostitute. Rough-and-tumble Harry (Inigo Jackson) finds himself robbed and left penniless after visiting a Soho saloon. Shy and naive Jamie (Colin Campbell) falls in love with the homeless Jean (Francesca Annis). As the hours go by, Jamie has to decide whether to leave Jean or to jump ship and marry her. ~ Paul Brenner, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Heather Sears, Bernard Lee, (more)
In this youthful drama, based on a true story, a group of boarding school girls who have lost their virginity begin to proudly wear yellow teddy bear pins to show that they are now worldly women. One of them, a troubled 16-year old who has been ignored by her parents, is quite pleased when she finally gets her pin. Unfortunately she also gets pregnant. Her impregnator is a window washer and aspiring pop singer. She needs an abortion and is assisted by a helpful hooker who also helps her become a streetwalker so she can raise the cash for the operation. The girls father is outraged when he learns the truth, but he blames the school's biology teacher, not his daughter. He is angry with the educator because she knew all about the teddy bear club and was the one who talked about sex with them. The teacher resigns after being reprimanded. Before she does though, she gives an emotional speech to the school board. Meanwhile the troubled girl, runs away to London. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Jacqueline Ellis, Annette Whiteley, (more)
Purporting to warn young people of premarital sex, this British drama is exploitation with a capital 'E.' Set in a conservative peaceful village, the drama begins with the arrival of a sexy Austrian girl who proceeds to seduce every man in sight. One of her victims is engaged. When his fiancee finds out, she has an insecurity attack and lets her beloved have sex with her. This results in pregnancy. Later the Austrian hussy gets raped by her steady because he is jealous of her other trysts. To top it off, she ends up contracting a dreaded venereal disease. Naturally all of those who sampled her ample wares get into quite a tizzy. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide



















