Get Carter (1971)
Facts
| Directed by | Mike Hodges |
| Cast | Michael Caine, Ian Hendry, Britt Ekland, John Osborne (II), Tony Beckley, Alun Armstrong, Bernard Hepton and Terence Rigby |
| Theatrical Release | March 18, 1971 |
| DVD Release | October 3, 2000 |
| Running Time | 112 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | R (Restricted) |
| UPC Code | 012569540026 |
| Buy this item | $15.99 at Amazon.com As of Jul 4 17:35 EDT (details) 1 DVD, Warner Brothers, Usually ships in 24 hours, Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Widescreen, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language - Dolby Digital 2.0), English (Subtitled), French (Subtitled) Or 32 new from $13.49, 13 used from $7.70 |
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Great thriller/drama film with hidden depth. |
| Revenge Consumes Everything In Its Path |
Well, he was almost right. Michael Caine is, honestly, outstanding in the lead role here, playing a mob operative who heads home to Newcastle upon the death of his brother. As a gang figure, he understands the ethos. As a brother, he shows just about the only redemptive emotion when he first sees his brother's dressed corpse, laid out for cremation. He touches his brothers hands.
After that, if he touches anybody, it's either to satisfy his sexual appetite, to advance his relentless campaign for revenge, or to inflict pain for information-gathering or payback.
The violence is simple, continual and at times a little showy. The message of the film is simple: a compulsive desire for revenge is honorable as a pursuit of the truth, maybe, but destroys everything, especially the owner of the need for revenge.
When the movie was over, the lights came up and we tried to decide who left this film unscathed. We decided even the guy who gets hired to kill Carter won't get paid for the job, since his employer is under arrest. Carter's neice won't be able to go to South America with Carter, as Carter proposed, because...
Well, that would be telling. Good movie, but, for sure, don't expect to feel good. May 7, 2008
| Carter Got His Gun |
| Mike Hodges invites us into his odd little world |
There's a scene about halfway through Get Carter where, if you haven't realized it yet, Mike Hodges makes it very plain that this is not your momma's gangster film. Carter (Michael Caine) and his landlady (Rosemarie Dunham) are in the midst of a romp when two of the members of Carter's gang come in and try to convince him to come back to London with them (Carter is in Newcastle investigating his brother's suspicious death). Various silliness ensues that ends with Carter, starkers, running out into the street. All of this, mind you, is accompanied by a kazoo soundtrack, as there's a children's kazoo corps having a parade in the street. Yes, one thinks, this sort of thing, naked gangster included, is absolutely normal in the odd little world Mike Hodges inhabits.
Get Carter is another one of those "they don't make 'em like that anymore" films. In this case, it's because Get Carter set most of the standards in use today. It's the French Connection (coincidentally released the same year) of gangster movies-- there ain't no good guys. Everyone's painted in shades of nastiness. Even Carter, our would-be hero, is an entirely unsympathetic character. One might even go so far as to call him hateful. There is no glorification of anything to be found here, just a bleak, relentless ugliness.
Given such a setup, then, in order to avoid falling into its own trap, Get Carter has to have something to raise the bar in other ways. And it does. Hodges' script is crackerjack through and through, fast and funny and never once letting up on the action. The acting is top-notch, as one expects from Michael Caine, and the lighting and cinematography are perfect for the subject matter-- everything is bleak, ugly, littered.
Loads of fun, and well worth your time. *** ½
January 3, 2008
| Solid Gangster film, but not great |
The film is a early blueprint for later British and American Gangster films with its brutal violence and "true life" style. Cain's Jack Carter is amoral, vindictive, and self serving, in other words, the perfect gangster. He is cool as a cucumber in situations where normal people would lose their cool and treats the people and the world around him as his own personal spittoon. Cain does a brilliant job under-acting the role, letting his facial expressions and postures do the talking for the most part. The best example of this is where Carter places a fresh made corpse in a rock car to be ferried off into the ocean and dumped there. Carter, shotgun on shoulder, walks next to the car as it begins it trek, grinning slyly as if he is walking with a lover in sun soaked meadows. Chilling and disturbing.
Get Carter is a good strong film that lags in parts but makes up for it with a flurry of unapologetic violence in the end. Michael Cain made this movie, I think, to show that he was not just another handsome face in the crowd of 1970's leading men and that he had range beyond Alfie. Carter is almost Terminator like once his task is fully laid out for him and he works through it like a bull in a china shop. An enjoyable gangster film with a twist ending that comes from left field. November 15, 2007





