Even by the bottom-feeding
standards of director Al Adamson’s usual fare, Hell’s Bloody Devils is unwatchable garbage. Apparently a
slapped-together compendium of footage from two (or more) incomplete features,
the movie is part biker flick, part espionage caper, part romance, and part
brain-melting sludge. Watching this picture is like staring at a TV that
changes its own channels, because scenes stop abruptly, characters drift in and
out the picture, and the vibe toggles between clean-cut ’60s (some of the
footage was shelved for years) and sleazy ’70s. At its weirdest, the movie
stops dead when two characters visit a Kentucky Fried Chicken franchise for
lunch and Colonel Sanders himself enters frame to ask the characters how
they’re enjoying their meal. Familiar actors John Carradine and Broderick
Crawford make fleeting appearances in Hell’s
Bloody Devils—or, to put a finer point on it, in The Fakers, the espionage picture that Adamson commenced in the
’60s and repurposed for about half the footage of Hell’s Bloody Devils. Whatever. Hell’s
Bloody Devils cuts from pointless vignettes of bikers festooned with Nazi
regalia to a truly bewildering storyline about an Israeli secret agent teamed
with a U.S. operative to do—something. Eventually, the spy stuff leads to a
chase scene through a theme park, which comprises drab shots of people running
through crowds to the accompaniment of overbearing music. Presumably, diehard
schlock archivists have catalogued the components of this disastrous film’s
ironic appeal, but for mere mortals, this is about as wretched as grade-Z
cinema gets.
Hell’s Bloody Devils: SQUARE