Hell’s Five Hours (1958)
Directors

Hell's Five Hours
Overview
This story follows a crazed man on his way to committing suicide on the town's rocket fuel plant with a bomb strap to his torso after being fired from the plant. But while up on top of a fuel storage tank, a young lady who is the plant managers wife and son are both soon held hostage by the suicidal man. With the man about to commit suicide and take the whole town with him, it's up to the plant manager and husband of hostage to tell the police to get all families out of town and to convince the man to not make this deadly decision.
Hell\’s Five Hours Film Details
Overview: A disgruntled ex-employee of a missile fuel plant plans to commit suicide by blowing himself and the plant up with explosives.
Tagline: Top suspense story of the nuclear age!
Review: Released in the late ’50s when paranoia about thermonuclear annihilation was running rampant through America, Hell’s Five Hours looks not at Communist operators but at a disturbed individual with access to one installation of the nation’s military-industrial complex. It’s set at night, in cozy Meritville, a little town whose chief employer is a huge and ominous rocket-fuel plant (in an expressionist touch, it registers as a looming bank of lights in the dark distance). When a disgruntled worker (Vic Morrow) gets fired, he straps dynamite around his chest activated by a mercury-switch detonator if he topples over (from a rifle shot, say), the bomb goes off anyway. (It’s Morrow’s own appropriation of the Doomsday Machine.) His goal (which “voices” told him to accomplish) is nothing less than igniting a catastrophic explosion that will flatten the town and unleash clouds of deadly cyanide gas. When his first attempt to break into the plant undetected goes awry, Morrow slinging a corn-pone drawl patterned after the late James Dean realizes that he’ll need some unwilling accomplices. So he turns up at the house of the plant’s chief engineer (Stephen McNally), abducting his wife (Colleen Gray) and son. He then tears back to the plant, with Gray his hostage. The only movie ever made by Jack L. Copeland (who wrote, produced and directed), Hell’s Five Hours is little more than a prolonged standoff between Morrow and McNally’s forces, but it abounds with deft touches. Those that aren’t so deft leave clues as to how society during the second Eisenhower administration was portrayed on contemporary film. (Atop one of the massive fuel tanks, which supposedly has a weak roof, Morrow orders Gray to test its strength by walking across it; so she does, in the same pair of high heels she had been wearing, late in the evening, at home.) With its premise a deranged terrorist stalking a sleepy, complacent hamlet in dead of night, with plans to kindle Armageddon, Hell’s Five Hours stands as an uneasy preview of events that would occur years later: Three Mile Island, Bhopal, even 9/11. In 1958, it may have been received as alarmist; today, we, alas, know better.
Country: USA
Language: English
Duration: 73 min
Genre: Crime, Drama, Film-Noir, Thriller
Also known as: –r–basis-X 13-sprengen—,Hell’s Five Hours,Raketenbasis X 13 sprengen,Cinco horas en el infierno,Pente ores stin Kolasi,Cinque ore disperate,Cinci ore de iad,5 Horas no Inferno,Helvetets fem timmar,俺に近づくな!