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poster of Point Blank
Rating: 7.032/10 by 376 users

Point Blank (1967)

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.

Directing:
  • John Boorman
  • Al Jennings
Writing:
  • Donald E. Westlake
  • Alexander Jacobs
  • Rafe Newhouse
  • David Newhouse
Stars:
Release Date: Wed, Aug 30, 1967

Rating: 7.032/10 by 376 users

Alternative Title:
Le Point de non retour - FR
Point Blank – Keiner darf überleben - DE
포인트 블랭크 - KR
殺しの分け前/ポイント・ブランク - JP
Hevneren fra Alcatraz - NO
Hämnaren från Alcatraz - SE
À queima roupa - PT

Country:
United States of America
Language:
English
Runtime: 01 hour 31 minutes
Budget: $2,500,000
Revenue: $3,200,000

Plot Keyword: based on novel or book, overdose, alcatraz prison, revenge, organized crime, los angeles, california, neo-noir, left for dead, parker

Lloyd Bochner
Frederick Carter
Kathleen Freeman
First Citizen
Victor Creatore
Carter's Man
Lawrence Hauben
Car Salesman
Susan Holloway
Girl Customer
Sid Haig
1st Penthouse Lobby Guard
Michael Bell
2nd Penthouse Lobby Guard
Priscilla Boyd
Receptionist
Ron Walters
Young Man in Apartment
George Strattan
Young Man in Apartment
Nicole Rogell
Carter's Secretary
Rico Cattani
Reese's Guard
Roland La Starza
Reese's Guard
Paul Bradley
Conventioneer (uncredited)
George Bruggeman
Conventioneer (uncredited)
George Calliga
Conventioneer (uncredited)
Jerry Catron
Man (uncredited)
Dick Cherney
Spectator (uncredited)
Bud Cokes
Conventioneer (uncredited)
Bonnie Dewberry
Dancer (uncredited)
Richard Elmore
Conventioneer (uncredited)
Barbara Feldon
Girl in TV Commercial (uncredited)
Duke Fishman
Bar Patron (uncredited)
Carey Foster
Dancer (uncredited)
Stu Gardner
Singer (uncredited)
Rudy Germane
Conventioneer (uncredited)
Kenneth Gibson
Conventioneer (uncredited)
Bill Hickman
Reese's Guard on Balcony (uncredited)
Chuck Hicks
Guard (uncredited)
George Hoagland
Conventioneer (uncredited)
Harvey Karels
Conventioneer (uncredited)
Joseph La Cava
Conventioneer (uncredited)
Louise Lane
Conventioneer (uncredited)
Karen Lee
Waitress (uncredited)
Ethelreda Leopold
Conventioneer (uncredited)
Philo McCullough
Conventioneer (uncredited)
Joseph Mell
Man (uncredited)
Monty O'Grady
Conventioneer (uncredited)
Andrew Orapeza
Desk Clerk (uncredited)
Murray Pollack
Conventioneer (uncredited)
Anthony Redondo
Conventioneer (uncredited)
Leoda Richards
Conventioneer (uncredited)
Clark Ross
Conventioneer (uncredited)
Cosmo Sardo
Conventioneer (uncredited)
Jeffrey Sayre
Spectator (uncredited)
Felix Silla
Bellhop (uncredited)
Norman Stevans
Conventioneer (uncredited)
Robert Strong
Conventioneer (uncredited)
Tim Taylor
Conventioneer (uncredited)
Sid Troy
Conventioneer (uncredited)
Guy Way
Bill (Brewster's Chauffeur) (uncredited)
Ted White
Football Player (uncredited)
Louis Whitehill
Policeman (uncredited)
Roseann Williams
Dancer (uncredited)
John Zimeas
Spectator (uncredited)

John Chard

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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