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The World’s
Greatest Sinner
Directed by Timothy Carey
Released: 1962
Starring Timothy Carey, Gil Barreto, Betty Rowland, James Farley
Running Time: 82 minutes
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In what is quite possibly the strangest rock
and roll film ever made, Timothy Carey plays Clarence Hilliard, a man who
wants to be God. He quits his job as an insurance agent to pursue his
dream. By preaching the promise of eternal life on Earth and using the
energy of rock and roll, Clarence slowly begins to become more and more
popular. He even changes his name to God Hilliard which his followers are
all too willing to call him. The devil sees great potential in this
blasphemer and shows up as a PR man (played by James Farley) to steer God
Hilliard towards a career in politics.
In this outrageous and very strange film which he wrote, directed,
produced, and distributed, Timothy Carey ridicules the hypocrisy and
megalomania of politicians, religious leaders, and rock stars. When
Clarence delivers a speech about how every human being can be their own
God while absentmindedly standing on a pile of fertilizer is a very
telling moment about Carey’s intentions for this film. The odd soundtrack
is provided by Frank Zappa who combines trashy rock and roll with
outlandish library music producing excellent and unique results.
Like a cross between Elvis Presley and Jim Jones, Clarence Hilliard is a
heretic, a demon, and an undulating rock and roll Beelzebub. The scenes
where he wildly plays guitar with his band in a completely out of tune and
off tempo fashion while the people go bonkers (even girls trying to rip
his clothes off) are hilarious. Taking potshots at Elvis Presley and Jerry
Lee Lewis, this film mocks celebrities and the people that worship them.
I have always been disturbed by legendary character actor Timothy Carey. I
first noticed him in John Cassavete’s The Killing of
a Chinese Bookie and his malignant presence always creeps me out.
The guy looks like a walking corpse whose skin is falling off of his
buzzard-like head. Even Carey’s voice has an unnatural ring to it as
though it’s coming from a somewhere other than his mouth. The man is
completely unhinged and his mind is boiling over with insanity yet there’s
a dark intelligence underneath it all.
So I wasn’t surprised at all when I found out about this intelligent and
wickedly sardonic film. The World’s Greatest Sinner is a fantastic cult
film with hints of experimental editing and documentary-style direction
(partially due to budget constraints) that is way ahead of its time. With
all the subtlety of a sledgehammer made of dynamite, this is a deeply
religious film that exposes human beings as the pathetic beasts that we
are while at the same time questioning everything sacred.
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Quotes
“I’m not a preacher and I’m not drunk! I’m just
a politician!”
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