Point Blank

There are two kinds of people in his up-tight world: his victims and his women. And sometimes you can't tell them apart.

7.0
19671h 31m

Production

Logo for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

After being double-crossed and left for dead, a mysterious man named Walker single-mindedly tries to retrieve the rather inconsequential sum of money that was stolen from him.

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Point Blank (1967) - trailer

Point Blank (1967) - trailer

Thumbnail for video: John Landis on POINT BLANK

John Landis on POINT BLANK

Cast

Photo of Lloyd Bochner

Lloyd Bochner

Frederick Carter

Photo of John Vernon

John Vernon

Mal Reese

Photo of Roberta Haynes

Roberta Haynes

Mrs. Carter

Photo of Kathleen Freeman

Kathleen Freeman

First Citizen

Photo of Sid Haig

Sid Haig

1st Penthouse Lobby Guard

Photo of Michael Bell

Michael Bell

2nd Penthouse Lobby Guard

Photo of Rico Cattani

Rico Cattani

Reese's Guard

Photo of George Calliga

George Calliga

Conventioneer (uncredited)

Photo of Jerry Catron

Jerry Catron

Man (uncredited)

Photo of Barbara Feldon

Barbara Feldon

Girl in TV Commercial (uncredited)

Photo of Bill Hickman

Bill Hickman

Reese's Guard on Balcony (uncredited)

Photo of Chuck Hicks

Chuck Hicks

Guard (uncredited)

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Reviews

J

John Chard

9/10

You're a very bad man, Walker, a very destructive man!

Point Blank is directed by John Boorman and collectively adapted to screenplay by Alexander Jacobs, David Newhouse and Rafe Newhouse from the novel The Hunter written by Richard Stark. It stars Lee Marvin, Angie Dickinson, Keenan Wynn, Carroll O'Connor, Lloyd Bochner and Michael Strong. Music is by Johnny Mandel and the Panavision cinematography (in Metrocolor) is by Philip H. Lathrop.

Betrayed by wife and friend during a robbery, Walker (Marvin) is left dying on a stone cold cell floor at closed down Alcatraz...

Pure neo-noir, a film that could be argued was ahead of its time, given that it wouldn't find a fan base until many years later. Yet it deserves to be bracketed as a benchmark for the second phase of noir, a shining light of the neo world, experimenting with techniques whilst beating a true film noir heart.

The story is deliciously biting, pumped full of betrayals and double crosses, fatales and revenge, death and destruction. It even has a trick in the tale, ambiguity. It all plays out in a boldly coloured Los Angeles, the photography sparkles as Mandel lays an elegiacal and haunting musical score over the various stages of the drama. The talented Boorman has a field day with the elements of time, shunting various strands of the story around with sequences that at first glance seem out of place, but actually are perfect in context to what is narratively happening, the director gleefully toying with audience expectations. While suffice to say angles are tilted and close ups broadened to further style the pic.

Then there is Walker, a single minded phantom type character, played with grace and menace by Marvin - who better to trawl the Los Angeles underworld with than Marv? This guy only wants what he is owed from the robbery, nothing more, nothing less, but if the meagre reward is not forthcoming, people are going to pay with something more precious than cash. His mission is both heroic and tragic, with Boorman asking the viewers to improvise their thought process about what it all inevitably means. Funding the fuel around Marvin are good players providing slink, sleaze and suspicion.

Deliberate pacing isn't for everyone, neither is stylised violence and stylish directorial trickery, but for those who dine at said tables, Point Blank, and Walker the man, is for you. 9/10

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