Hell on Devil's Island (1957) Poster

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4/10
Reliable actors try to overcome dirt cheap budget
arode7 May 2006
"Listen, you poisoned a couple of wives and I cracked some Foreign Legion skulls, we belong here... or someplace like it." So says Devil's Island prisoner Rex Ingram to his buddy Lou Adler in a Cayenne saloon in "Hell on Devil's Island" This low budget effort has an interesting story about a crusading journalist (Helmut Dantine) who is trapped at the French penal colony and combines with an honest Governor (Robert Cornthwaite) to overcome a brutal forced labor racket. The heavies are led by a whip-wielding William Talman who snarls his way through his last feature appearance before making his mark as D.A. Hamilton Burger in the Perry Mason television show.

An ensemble of veteran performers tries hard and the script, despite a few off-center laughs, really isn't that bad. The picture is ultimately betrayed by a rock-bottom budget laden with cheap-looking television interiors and an excessive number of two-shot,close-ups of the actors. The exterior 'jungle' scenes strongly resemble the old Republic lot across the street from O'Brien's Bar and the 76 station on Ventura Blvd in Studio City or Topanga Canyon before the strip malls and tract houses completely took over. One sequence was filmed in the caves by Griffith Park.

Imagine a movie about Devil's Island that possesses the expansive cinematography of a Jack Webb helmed television episode and you have a pretty good overview of this picture.

Not too bad if you don't take it seriously.
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3/10
It's hell all right!
JohnHowardReid19 May 2017
Warning: Spoilers
SYNOPSIS: A journalist is ill-treated by the brutal governor of a prison in French Guiana.

COMMENT: Any excitement engendered by seeing Christian Nyby's name as director of this grade "B" RegalScope production is quickly dissipated by the first quarter-hour of stagey groupings, endless talk, nondescript acting, flat photography, and stock shots dissolving into the same three or four unconvincing sound stage sets. The whole film is like that! Even the climax is pretty tame and were it not the presence of Misses Donna Martell and Jean Willes, my entertainment rating would be even lower than it is.

It's hard to believe that a leading Hollywood company like 20th Century-Fox would even dream of releasing such a low-standard movie.
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