Hell Up In Harlem

Hell Up In Harlem(1973)

R
12/01/1973 (US)Action, Thriller, Crime, Drama1h 35m
5.5

"Black Godfather is back... and there's gonna be hell up in Harlem!"

Overview

A Harlem gangster must rescue his ex-wife, who's been kidnapped by the Mafia.

Larry Cohen

Director

Larry Cohen

Screenplay

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Part of the Tommy Gibbs Collection

Fred Williamson stars as Tommy Gibbs in these blaxploitation crime movies

Media

Hell Up in Harlem (1973) ORIGINAL TRAILER [HD 1080p]

Hell Up in Harlem (1973) ORIGINAL TRAILER [HD 1080p]

Trailer

Larry Cohen on HELL UP IN HARLEM

Larry Cohen on HELL UP IN HARLEM

Featurette

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J
A review by John Chard
6.0

Written on April 22, 2019

Serious side-burns is back!

After the success of Black Caesar earlier in the year, this sequel was rushed into production to hopefully cash in on the clamour for Blaxploitation shenanigans. Sadly it's a rush job that is all too evidently half baked.

Plot has Fred Wiliamson return as Tommy Gibbs (resurrected from the dead apparently!), who takes on corrupt D.A. Diangelo (Gerald Gordon) whilst dealing with matters of the heart. Directed by Larry Cohen, it's with Cohen's frank honest views on the film that critique should start. He would say that Hell Up In Harlem is a 90 minutes montage movie, and he is absolutely right.

This is jerkily episodic as it runs a course of people talking then cutting to boisterous action, then some talking and cut again to some more boisterous action, and on it goes for the complete run time. That the action is so gripping - and some choice dialogue zingers in the mix as well - keeps this from being an unwatchable mess. You also have to have respect for this type of guerrilla film making, it literally is filmed on the fly.

Regardless of the unbelievable aspects of it all, the oodles of bright red fake blood, and poorly executed stunt work, the rawness of the violence keeps things above average. In fact there's a bit of bad taste simmering away in the violent dynamics, with no legal consequences of lead character's actions, which of course is a blaxploitation trait.

It's messy, but it's entertaining mess within the genre it sits in. 6/10