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McQ schlägt zu

Originaltitel: McQ
  • 1974
  • 16
  • 1 Std. 51 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,2/10
6338
IHRE BEWERTUNG
John Wayne and Diana Muldaur in McQ schlägt zu (1974)
Trailer for this action film
trailer wiedergeben2:14
1 Video
59 Fotos
ActionDramaKriminalitätMysteryThriller

Der Polizist Lon McQ untersucht den Mord an seinem besten Freund und die Korruption innerhalb der Polizeipräsidiums von Seattle.Der Polizist Lon McQ untersucht den Mord an seinem besten Freund und die Korruption innerhalb der Polizeipräsidiums von Seattle.Der Polizist Lon McQ untersucht den Mord an seinem besten Freund und die Korruption innerhalb der Polizeipräsidiums von Seattle.

  • Regie
    • John Sturges
  • Drehbuch
    • Lawrence Roman
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • John Wayne
    • Eddie Albert
    • Diana Muldaur
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,2/10
    6338
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • John Sturges
    • Drehbuch
      • Lawrence Roman
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • John Wayne
      • Eddie Albert
      • Diana Muldaur
    • 93Benutzerrezensionen
    • 33Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    McQ
    Trailer 2:14
    McQ

    Fotos59

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    Topbesetzung38

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    John Wayne
    John Wayne
    • McQ
    Eddie Albert
    Eddie Albert
    • Kosterman
    Diana Muldaur
    Diana Muldaur
    • Lois
    Colleen Dewhurst
    Colleen Dewhurst
    • Myra
    Clu Gulager
    Clu Gulager
    • Toms
    David Huddleston
    David Huddleston
    • Pinky
    Julian Christopher
    Julian Christopher
    • J.C.
    • (as Jim Watkins)
    Al Lettieri
    Al Lettieri
    • Santiago
    Julie Adams
    Julie Adams
    • Elaine
    Roger E. Mosley
    Roger E. Mosley
    • Rosey
    William Bryant
    William Bryant
    • Stan Boyle
    Richard Kelton
    Richard Kelton
    • Radical
    Joe Tornatore
    Joe Tornatore
    • LaSalle
    Dick Friel
    • Bob Mahoney
    Richard Eastham
    Richard Eastham
    • Walter Forrester
    Fred Waugh
    • Bodyguard
    Larry Buck
    • Chief Grogan
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Leslie Carlson
    Leslie Carlson
    • Radical
    • (Nicht genannt)
    • Regie
      • John Sturges
    • Drehbuch
      • Lawrence Roman
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen93

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    7bkoganbing

    Corruption in the Seattle PD

    I've always felt that John Wayne did his two police films McQ and Brannigan for a combination of reasons. Some of his last westerns before these like The Train Robbers and Cahill were really not up to standard and didn't get the reception at the box office Wayne films could usually expect. I also think those rugged western locations were becoming a problem healthwise. And of course Wayne was bowing to the public's new taste in heroes.

    In McQ Wayne is investigating the death of his partner, the way Humphrey Bogart investigated the shooting death of Jerome Cowan in the Maltese Falcon. He has to go private to do it, he actually resigns from the Seattle PD and gets a private license, courtesy of a friend, David Huddleston. The investigation leads him to some surprising and not welcome conclusions.

    John Wayne is always the great symbol of law and order and at first glance you would think this might not be a role for him, investigating crooked cops. But when you think about it in films like Tall in the Saddle and Rio Lobo he dealt with crooked sheriffs in the usual Wayne manner. In fact the whole point of Rio Lobo is Wayne putting his whole life on hold to find a couple of guys who betrayed him and their country during the Civil War. So McQ is definitely in line with both of those films.

    In the supporting cast my favorite is Al Lettieri the drug kingpin of Seattle. Lettieri's death a few years after this film was a great loss to cinema. During the first half of the Seventies, ever since playing Virgil Sollozzo in The Godfather, Lettieri created some really outstanding villains and Manny Santiago here is one of them.

    The ending will surprise you and its more Maltese Falcon than you would think.
    8knight_hawk2002

    A refreshing change of pace for the Duke.

    By the early seventies the western genre was in severe decline, and with the exception of Clint Eastwood the only other bankable actor within the genre who could return a sure fire hit was John Wayne. However having made a string or westerns in succession John Wayne was eager to broaden his horizons and undertake a new project, the project was to be a contemporary detective drama titled 'McQ'.

    McQ is set in Seattle and follows Lon McQ (Duke) in his pursuit of the gangsters whom murdered his friend and colleague Stan Boyle. As the quest intensifies McQ uncovers the motive behind his friends killing and uncovers corruption that stems right to the top of the police hierarchy.

    While the movie was slammed by critics and some anti Wayne elements its impossible to deny that John Wayne is well cast in this movie as a tough cop who is something of an outsider in a world of changing values. The Duke gives a fine performance with some good supporting players most notably Eddie Albert, Al Lettieri, Colleen Dewhurst and Diana Muldaur There are some well-staged action scenes including two high-speed car chases and an exciting climatic shootout. One notable if somewhat improbable action scene involves two lorries playing a large-scale version of dodgems with McQ's car that would have been very akin to a scene from a James Bond movie.

    The movie delves into several interesting areas including corruption, family breakdowns and the shadowy underworld of drugs, one brilliantly directed and acted scene involves McQ exchanging drugs for vital information about an imminent drugs heist, this scene illustrates just how complex the drug underworld actually is and the chemistry between McQ and Myra is very evident.

    The overall tone of the movie is notably grim and gritty and while the movie would have benefited from a larger budget, tighter direction and greater character development, nevertheless McQ was an undeniable hit at the box office and is a worthy entry into John Wayne's impressive portfolio.
    inspectors71

    My Sinful Pleasure

    My opinion of John Sturges' McQ has evolved over the years. I saw it thirty years ago on NBC (with only a few bullet holes and mild curse words eliminated) and thought it was a flabby, but relatively decent little cops and robbers flick. It had the additional enjoyment of being filmed, in part, in Seattle, an exotic city some 280 miles from my home, Spokane.

    John Wayne was something of a cartoon to me when I was a teenager. I didn't understand or appreciate his body of work and that he was a unique performer--to paraphrase his words, "not an actor, but a re-actor." His screen persona was simple and subtle, very human yet heroic. I didn't see any of this; McQ was just John Wayne putting on a business suit (as the reviewer in Time said, "Seems like putting Cary Grant in bib overalls"), strapping on an exotic weapon, and sliding behind the wheel of a Trans Am to go kick drug-dealer butt. McQ wasn't anything special. Just a cop movie with an old guy playing young.

    As I got older--and saw McQ uncut on WTBS or KSTW--I began to appreciate both the film and its star even more. Yet I knew that the conventional wisdom of McQ was that it was a ridiculous attempt to modernize Wayne's image, to cash in on his stardom (which it didn't; McQ flopped at the box office). I declared McQ to be my official "Sinful Pleasure," a really bad movie that is truly lovable.

    Think of a dog so ugly it's cute.

    I taped a keeper copy of it off Cinemax, watched it every year or so. A DVD came a couple of years ago. I realized I never get tired of this movie. It's got lots to complain about--the looping of the dialogue is atrocious, the geography is laughable, the clichés are stacked like cord-wood, and the thought of all the better things John Sturges did in his career keeps popping into my mind.

    Yet . . .

    Wayne is at his most comfortable, maybe his best work since In Harm's Way. The crime drama itself plays out nicely, with clues being offered out at just the right pace, Seattle and the Olympic Penninsula are beautifully sun-washed and crisp-looking, and Wayne's costars give real weight to the movie--Colleen Dewhurst, Eddie Albert, Diana Muldaur, and David Huddleston, to name a few. There are a few over-the-top scenes that stretch credulity (his confiscation of a MAC-10 machine pistol from a gun dealer and talking Ebonics to Roger E. Mosley come to mind), but our affection for Wayne, and his professionalism, allow him to tame the gamier moments. You actually can believe his call for help to Seattle patrolmen when his car is demolished by a couple of semis, "Get some foam on this thing. I'm up to my butt in gas!" His embarrassment when asking for money from ex-wife Julie Adams and her moneybags husband is one of the best moments in the movie. And, of course, his being seduced by Dewhurst, at first, is so off-putting that you may want to make a Mystery Science Theater 3000 comment at the screen.

    But if you're anywhere near adulthood, realize this: Middle aged people (Wayne's character is in his fifties and so is Dewhurst's) have sex. Wayne is the gentleman, here. He's being approached by Dewhurst and he doesn't want his saying no to be hurtful or condescending. If you watch the scene more than once, I believe you will see it as a sweet and decent moment and not some sort of dirty joke about old folks.

    This brings us back to the evolution of my opinion of McQ. First it was an okay shootemup, then a sinful indulgence, and now, a set of good performances that lift up an otherwise pedestrian crime drama. It's easy to brand a movie a "sinful pleasure" because you can trash it while enjoying it. Sort of a cheap shot; cowardice comes to mind. McQ is no longer a sin for me to enjoy. It's a pretty good movie with really good people.

    I recommend it, warts, jive, and all.
    drk1996

    GOOD "DUKE" MOVIE...NOT THE BEST, BUT ABOVE AVERAGE

    McQ was one of John Wayne's efforts to move into a new era. McQ was not the best of Wayne's movies, but it wasn't the worst (an old friend who is no longer around once said there were no bad John Wayne movies). Just turning 50 myself, I remember the John Wayne movies of my youth, and Wayne was always "tops" on my list. McQ was "Classic Wayne" in a new era. The 70s were a time when men were starting to become different in the movies. Not like the men of my youth. Wayne kept that "macho" image going. In another post, a comment was made the Wayne used "big weapons" to foil the bad guys long before Rambo did. That is exactly right. It is great to sit and watch an action movie with so many great starts of the past (Wayne, Eddie Albert, Diana Muldaur, Colleen Dewhurst, Clu Gulager, and a young Roger E. Mosley). Another thing that is of interest is these so called "movie experts" that watch movies, and don't understand one thing about the movie they comment one. McQ's car was a Trans Am, not an AMC Hornet. It was referred to at a "Green Hornet" in reference to the TV show "The Green Hornet." It was the nickname of his car, not the made or model of the car. His Trans Am was the same color as the Green Hornet's car. This is a good John Wayne movie. Good music, good car chases, good story line. It is a good movie to sit and watch on an rainy afternoon. Enjoy it for what it is. A nice chance to relive some moments from your youth, and see the Duke in action. Enjoy yourself, and have fun. That was the purpose of the movie.
    7Ed-Shullivan

    John Wayne as a tough as nails cop .... all John Wayne fans will enjoy

    Okay so John Wayne will forever be remembered as "The Duke" in a countless string of westerns, but watching him play an honorable and tough as nails cop named Police Lieutenant Lon McQ, is worth every penny watching him do "his thing". Some of the other IMDb reviewers have compared this film to the Dirty Harry (Clint Eastwood) films but in fact The Duke, is just playing himself and rather than seeing him riding a big horse The Duke is seen cruising and shooting in his extremely rare Brewster Green 1973 Pontiac Trans Am SD-455 (Super Duty). I could not imagine the Hollywood heavyweight John Wayne squeezing into a two (2) door 1974 Ford Pinto so of course if he is playing a cop out to revenge his friends murder and defending himself against a mob and drug cartel, the director has to put The Duke behind a muscle car.

    Honestly, I have NEVER seen a bad John Wayne film and this is no exception. In fact I quite enjoyed the storyline, and John Wayne was perfectly cast as the lone detective out seeking justice with a big, big gun and two big fists. You will not be disappointed.

    I give McQ a solid 7 out of 10 IMDb rating.

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    Handlung

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    Wusstest du schon

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    • Wissenswertes
      Originally intended as a vehicle for Steve McQueen. It was heavily rewritten for John Wayne.
    • Patzer
      McQ uses an Ingram MAC-10 9mm machine pistol, which fires approximately 20 rounds per second. No empty cartridges are ejected from the gun when firing the MAC-10 in the car on the beach. Emptying a full 30-round magazine would have sprayed casings all over the car.
    • Zitate

      [McQ has just test-fired a MAC-10 submachine gun, and is putting it inside his leather bag. Jack, the gun shop owner reacts to this]

      Jack: You're not going to take it, are you?

      McQ: Just say it's a loan.

      Jack: Lon, it's not licensed!

      McQ: Jack, neither am I.

    • Alternative Versionen
      The 1980s Warner Home Video VHS master was made from a 16mm TV print missing ten seconds of footage including during the car chase involving a laundry truck, an additional punch from Santiago when he confronts McQ in his office, and the introduction of Santiago's henchman before the final chase on the beach. The later video releases and DVD are uncut.
    • Verbindungen
      Edited into La classe américaine (1993)

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 22. August 1974 (Westdeutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • McQ detective implacable
    • Drehorte
      • Olympic Peninsula, Washington, USA(End of movie beach and driving scenes.)
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Warner Bros.
      • Levy-Gardner Productions
      • Batjac Productions
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    Box Office

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    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 240.350 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 51 Min.(111 min)
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Mono
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 2.35 : 1

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