A successful professor has his life disrupted by a secret from his past - in his college days he became a member of a powerful secret society, and now the society has a job for him.A successful professor has his life disrupted by a secret from his past - in his college days he became a member of a powerful secret society, and now the society has a job for him.A successful professor has his life disrupted by a secret from his past - in his college days he became a member of a powerful secret society, and now the society has a job for him.
- Nominated for 1 Primetime Emmy
- 2 nominations total
Leon Alton
- Reporter
- (uncredited)
Frank Baker
- Fielder Associate
- (uncredited)
Joe Brooks
- Minor Role
- (uncredited)
Robert Brubaker
- Bell Operative
- (uncredited)
Barry Cahill
- Police Detective
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Glen Ford has always manage to persuade me of his Character in whatever movie he starred in. This film was no different. The story was written by David Karp and directed by Paul Wendkas. It tells the frightening story of an accomplished, successful man Prof. Andrew Patterson who thought he had reached obtained the pinnacle of professional success and the all American Dream. However, in returning to his old College Alma Mater and being reminded of the dark Secret Society, he joined is now pressed into servitude. " The Brotherhood of the Bell " is a frightening film which reminds us, there are and always have been secret organizations who can and will manipulate others to serve their needs. Although the Mafia comes to mind immediately, other groups such as the Free Masons and The Skulls are also threats. In the film, the 'Brotherhood' requires Andrew to seek out a close colleague and persuade him to not make a certain trip abroad. Unable to change his mind, he is thereafter Blackmailed into doing it. Instead of traveling, the friend commits suicide which creates a dizzying and disastrous train of events for Andrew who decides to expose the immensely powerful secret society. He is fired, from his job, considered unbalanced, his Wife leaves him. his family is threatened and he is thereafter ridiculed and ostracized. The end result has actually happened before during the Communist Scare of the 1950s and the Aids Epidemic of the 80's. Today's society is no different and that is why this movie is so important. Glenn Ford does a masterful job. Indeed the lists of fine stars is quite impressive. Stars like Dean Jagger, Maurice Evans and Will Geer make the movie and the terror which accompanied it, unforgettable. Recommended to all Conspiracy buffs. ****
Glen Ford is a successful professor -- an elite member of society. Little does he know that his membership in a fraternity known as the "Brotherhood of the Bell" guaranteed him much of his success. It has been over 30 years since I saw this movie on TV and I still remember William Conrad (Bart) and his ding-a-ling bell. What a pathetic excuse for a human being. Glen Ford's troubled character is also memorable, but this movie is not even listed in his credits. What a "sleeper". I hope I can find a copy.
I saw this when I was sixteen, and was struck by how intelligent it was. Ford is superb: smart, baffled, hurt, edgy, terrified. Geer is wonderful. Much like life in a police state, you never know if your friends can be trusted; everytime I saw Smithers on screen, I was waiting for them to ruin it by making him the baddie, but no! I remember how disheartened I was to read a Harlan Ellison essay in which he shrugged it off, and the "so-so" novel on which it was based. Well, I still think that this was one of the best television films ever made. Tnank you, Paul Wendkos!!
I saw this only once -- when it came out when I was ten years old. And I've never forgotten it. To this day I think this is probably the best made-for-TV movie ever.
Being so young when I saw it I'm sure I missed some subtleties, but nevertheless I knew something really wrong and conspiratorial was going on -- it was my first major fictional encounter with overwhelming paranoia and gross injustice, and it has stayed with me my entire life. It may even have been a factor in shaping my detestation of unjustified authority and power elites. I felt such profound, empathetic outrage at what was happening to Glenn Ford...I remember being transfixed the whole time, my blood percolating with anger and worry.
The acting (Glenn Ford was remarkable -- thoroughly convincing), the mood, the story, the crushing anxiety all still resonate within me more than thirty years later.
This is a movie that should see the light of day again -- it really ought to be available on DVD. [10/10]
Being so young when I saw it I'm sure I missed some subtleties, but nevertheless I knew something really wrong and conspiratorial was going on -- it was my first major fictional encounter with overwhelming paranoia and gross injustice, and it has stayed with me my entire life. It may even have been a factor in shaping my detestation of unjustified authority and power elites. I felt such profound, empathetic outrage at what was happening to Glenn Ford...I remember being transfixed the whole time, my blood percolating with anger and worry.
The acting (Glenn Ford was remarkable -- thoroughly convincing), the mood, the story, the crushing anxiety all still resonate within me more than thirty years later.
This is a movie that should see the light of day again -- it really ought to be available on DVD. [10/10]
The Brotherhood of the Bell is an elite fraternity whose members effectively control much of the government and non-government power in the U.S. Glenn Ford's character is a disillusioned member of the Brotherhood who attempts to expose it following the suicide of a friend whom it has victimized. Ford's attempts to expose the Brotherhood bring its power to bear on him, resulting in the destruction of his reputation, his job, and even his marriage. So convincing was this movie that I was left with the impression that much of the real power in this country could indeed be held by an elite oligarchy of rich and powerful people without the awareness of the general populace. See this one if you can.
Did you know
- TriviaFinal film of actress Virginia Gilmore.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The 23rd Annual Primetime Emmy Awards (1971)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- La hermandad de la campana
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 40m(100 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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