Born in the 1930s in France, Michel Bardinet made his mark in the world of cult cinema with a series of notable performances. He appears in The Hired Killer (1966), where he navigates the treacherous underworld of crime, and The Sweet Body of Deborah (1968), a film that blends eroticism with psychological tension. Bardinet's work in The Fast Set (1957) and An Ideal Place to Kill (1971) further cements his role in the exploration of provocative themes and complex characters within the genre, making him a significant figure in the landscape of exploitation cinema.
The Hired Killer
Hit-man Clint Harris has one more job to do before he can retire. The corporation which hires him demands that Harris "erase" an ex-employee who has become a snitch for the police. At first Harris refuses, but in the service of hired-killer-cinema tradition, his own brother is assassinated, so that he must accept.