Career Highlights: The Bandit of Zhobe, The Gorgon, The Plague of the Zombies
First Major Screen Credit: Black Memory (1947)
Biography
From 1933 until the outbreak of World War II, Briton John Gilling was steadily employed as a film editor. After serving with the Royal Navy, Gilling turned to scriptwriting, and in 1948 directed his first film, the Tod Slaughter melodrama The Greed of William Hart (1948). Evidently accepting whatever assignment came his way, Gilling invested as much creative energy in above-average suspensers like The Embezzler (1954) as he did in nonesuch like Old Mother Riley Meets a Vampire (1952). He was most closely associated with Hammer Studios, megging several of that firm's better horror efforts. Many aficionados consider 1967's Plague of the Zombies to be the director's finest work. Moving to Spain in 1970, John Gilling retired from filmmaking a few years later, preferring to channel his talents into painting. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Gilling entered films in 1933 as an editor and was an assistant director starting with Father O'Flynn in 1935 until his Royal Navy service in World War II. Gilling began screenwriting with Black Memory in 1947, and made his directing debut with a Bulldog Drummond film The Challenge in 1948. Gilling also produced and directed Old Mother Riley Meets the Vampire/Vampire Over London/My Son the Vampire in 1952. Gilling continued through the 1950's making several entertaining 'quota quickies' for Monty Berman's Tempean Films and entered television directing in several British made series that received international distribution such as Douglas Fairbanks Jr Presents and Gideon's Way, as well as Monty Berman's The Saint, The Champions, and Department S.
Starting in 1956 Gilling directed and wrote several films for Albert R. Broccoli and Irving Allen's Warwick Films beginning with Odongo. An unsuccessful John Gilling Enterprises production company made Fury at Smugglers Bay in 1961. Gilling joined Hammer Films in 1961 directing Shadow of the Cat where he achieved his greatest fame with several horror films as well as making the non horror Hammer films The Pirates of Blood River (1962) and The Scarlet Blade. Gilling also directed the second Charles Vinesuperspy film Where the Bullets Fly in 1966.
Gilling retired to Spain where he wiled away the time painting.
Quote
"Death is an incident producing clay. Use it, mold it, learn from it."[1]