Born in Berlin, Germany, in 1920, Wolf Rilla was the son of German
actor
Walter Rilla. When Nazi leader
Adolf Hitler came to power, the elder
Rilla--who was Jewish--moved his family to London, England.
After completing his education, Wolf went to work for the BBC World
Review in 1942, and in the late 1940s transferred to the network's
newly created television service. He stayed there for a few years, but
his passion was for films, and in 1952 he struck out on his own, making
his debut as a writer/director with
Glad Tidings! (1953). After making
several more independent low-budget features, he hooked up with Group
3, a production company formed by
Michael Balcon,
John Baxter and
John Grierson. His first film for
them was
The End of the Road (1954),
with
Finlay Currie. His next film for the
company,
Navy Heroes (1955),
about a shell-shocked war veteran, garnered positive critical reviews,
and his later comedy
Bachelor of Hearts (1958) was
a box-office success.
In 1960 Rilla, who by this time was working for MGM's British
operation, directed what would become his best-known film, the tense
and chilling
Village of the Damned (1960),
based on
John Wyndham's novel "The
Midwich Cuckoos", a tale of a sinister group of alien children taking
over a small British town. Rilla not only directed the film but, with
Ronald Kinnoch (writing as "George
Barclay") and
Stirling Silliphant,
also wrote it. The film was a tremendous success, making more than $1.5
million in the US alone--on an $82,000 budget--and spawned a
less-successful sequel,
Children of the Damned (1964).
Rilla directed his father Walter, along with
George Sanders, in
Cairo (1963), a somewhat anemic remake of
John Huston's classic
The Asphalt Jungle (1961),
with the plot changed to a heist of King Tut's jewels in a Cairo
museum.
Rilla occasionally crossed over to television in the 1950s, and by the
mid-'60s most of his work occurred in that medium. He was also a
lecturer at the International Film School in London, and wrote a very
well-received guide to screenwriting, "A-Z of Movie Making", in 1970.
He was an officer in the British Directors Guild as well as the film
technicians' trade association ACTT. He retired from the film industry
and, with his wife, bought and operated a hotel/restaurant, Le Moulin
de la Camandoule, in Fayence in Provence, France.