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The Reckoning

  • 1970
  • R
  • 1h 51min
NOTE IMDb
6,8/10
726
MA NOTE
Nicol Williamson in The Reckoning (1970)
Official Trailer
Lire trailer3:21
1 Video
19 photos
Drame

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueMichael Marler, a London businessman, returns to Liverpool after his father's death due to a fight with Anglo-Saxon teddy boys. As a matter of honor, he seeks revenge without involving the B... Tout lireMichael Marler, a London businessman, returns to Liverpool after his father's death due to a fight with Anglo-Saxon teddy boys. As a matter of honor, he seeks revenge without involving the British police.Michael Marler, a London businessman, returns to Liverpool after his father's death due to a fight with Anglo-Saxon teddy boys. As a matter of honor, he seeks revenge without involving the British police.

  • Réalisation
    • Jack Gold
  • Scénario
    • Patrick Hall
    • John McGrath
  • Casting principal
    • Nicol Williamson
    • Rachel Roberts
    • Ann Bell
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,8/10
    726
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Jack Gold
    • Scénario
      • Patrick Hall
      • John McGrath
    • Casting principal
      • Nicol Williamson
      • Rachel Roberts
      • Ann Bell
    • 13avis d'utilisateurs
    • 19avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Vidéos1

    The Reckoning
    Trailer 3:21
    The Reckoning

    Photos19

    Voir l'affiche
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    + 14
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    Rôles principaux58

    Modifier
    Nicol Williamson
    Nicol Williamson
    • Michael Marler
    Rachel Roberts
    Rachel Roberts
    • Joyce Eglington
    Ann Bell
    • Rosemary Marler
    Zena Walker
    Zena Walker
    • Hilda Greening
    Paul Rogers
    Paul Rogers
    • John Hazlitt
    Tom Kempinski
    • Brunzy
    Kenneth Hendel
    • Davidson
    Douglas Wilmer
    Douglas Wilmer
    • Moyle
    Barbara Ewing
    Barbara Ewing
    • Joan
    Gwen Nelson
    Gwen Nelson
    • Marler's Mother
    Christine Hargreaves
    • Kath
    Ernest C. Jennings
    • Dad (John Joe)
    • (as Ernest Jennings)
    Godfrey Quigley
    Godfrey Quigley
    • Dr. Carolan
    Desmond Perry
    • Father Madden
    J.G. Devlin
    J.G. Devlin
    • Cocky Burke
    Joe Gladwin
    Joe Gladwin
    • Drunk
    Peter Sallis
    Peter Sallis
    • Keresley
    Jackie Pallo
    • Wrestler
    • Réalisation
      • Jack Gold
    • Scénario
      • Patrick Hall
      • John McGrath
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs13

    6,8726
    1
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    8
    9
    10

    Avis à la une

    8tomgillespie2002

    A true forgotten British gem

    Indicator are a small British blu-ray label who seem to have made it their ultimate goal to unearth some of the best and weirdest forgotten gems from Britain's cinematic past, routinely releasing titles I've never even heard of that turn out to be well worthy of a remaster and rediscovery. One such title is Jack Gold's The Reckoning, a tough, lean thriller about a no-nonsense businessman who travels up North seeking vengeance. Sound familiar? The Reckoning has been compared to Get Carter, which was released the following year, and the two films certainly share some similarities. Yet tonally and thematically the two are worlds apart, with Gold's film more eager to explore class divide and national identity than Carter's more straightforward revenge fantasy. The Reckoning may also be the better film: a punishing experience full of off-putting characters that leaves more of a lasting impression than what many consider to be Michael Caine's finest hour.

    It tells the story of Mick Marler (Nicol Williamson), a corporate ball-buster who has worked his way up the ladder over the years with a combination of ruthless business savvy and sheer intimidation. He seems satisfied with his high income and strong social standing, but also has a button-pushing, gold-digging wife (Ann Bell) to contend with. After putting the pieces in place for a business manoeuvre that will favour both himself and his boss (as well as doing away with his biggest rival), Mick heads up north to Liverpool to visit his working-class Irish family. Immediately upon arrival, he discovers his father has died from a heart attack, but is disturbed when he discovers bruising on his father's body. After doing some digging, Mick learns that his father got into a fight with some English 'teddy boys', suffering the fatal heart attack after being punched and kicked to the ground by one of the gang. With his Irish blood boiling inside of him, Mick decides that he must avenge his father, but he also has responsibilities back home.

    Torn between his two worlds, Mick goes on a journey of self-discovery that ultimately makes him even more loathsome. When he is in the South, he laughs at the idea of being bound by blood and tradition to avenge his father, but when he is back North, a beast is awoken inside him, and he is irresistibly drawn to embracing his primitive instincts. It's a tough, ugly film that asks you to stick with this part-thug, part-corporate psychopath for just shy of two hours, but John McGrath's screenplay - based on the novel by Patrick Hall - trusts the audience to at least try to understand the man who breezes between two equally brutal, yet entirely different, worlds. This isn't action-packed or even violent as you would expect from a man-on-a-revenge-mission movie, but takes its time to develop this hateful yet fascinating character who used his working-class upbringing to batter his way into the world of lavish dinner parties and fast cars, and was both intrigued and repulsed by what he found. Williamson is excellent, managing to emote both outer ferocity and inner turmoil at the same time, and it's a puzzle why the actor didn't go on to land bigger roles. While it's chaotic at times, The Reckoning is a true forgotten gem that highlights how important the work carried out by Indicator really is.
    9ib011f9545i

    an amazing shocking film

    I am 57 years old. and have been a film fan all my life. I have seen many many films but until yesterday I had not seen this film.

    I give no spoilers but the film involves family loyalty,personal ambition and an Irish Catholic background in Liverpool in the late 1960s.

    It features great acting from actors and actresses that I had not seen much of before.

    This film is out on blu ray and I intend to buy it as soon as I can.

    If you like Kes and Get Carter and Villain you need to seek this one out.

    It is currently on Talking Pictures channel in the UK
    8ChuckTurner

    A Powerful, Bravura Picture

    I am in complete agreement with dan-filson-928-874987: THE RECKONING (which could almost be called a lost film now)is a powerful drama with a bravura performance by Nicol Williamson at its heart. Williamson specialised in being hard to like: he relished the negative attributes of every character he played. His performances tend to be quite broad, but the complete absence of sentimentality keeps them fresh. In THE RECKONING director Jack Gold keeps theatricality at bay. The powerful ending described by dan-filson-928-874987 is a fresh memory for me even after 40 years. Yes, there are similarities to GET CARTER: but CARTER is a genre picture, and THE RECKONING is a character drama. Both films are highly accomplished, but comparing them doesn't really shed much light on either, in my opinion. Time for Columbia or the BFI to get hold of a master and issue this on DVD.
    5sinapisme

    A Celebration of Brutishness

    50 years ago anti-heroes sold movies, though thankfully not this one. Audiences were delighted that there was no longer a required convention for villains to get caught, and directors exploited the new freedom to excess. This is a prime example of that excess. Our hero is a schizophrenic, one moment delighting in the rich mans trappings - flash car, large property in fashionable Surrey, wife with all the social graces, conventional senior management position in solid London based corporation, the next behaving like a football hooligan when he rediscovers his roots. His treatment of females is so despicable I'm not surprised that distributors wouldn't touch this film.

    At the end I wished that I was back in the fifties and that he was the one due the reckoning. No such luck.

    The film has some merit for the acting and camerawork but as entertainment it just left a nasty taste in the mouth.
    8dan-filson-928-874987

    Bravura performance by Nicol Williamson, and a great Jack Gold ensemble film

    I disagree with the first reviewer - this is a bravura performance by Nicol Williamson and much better than 'Get Carter'. As an indication of how much I respected this film, my father was in the film industry in London at the time and I was in Manchester as a student. I saw the film poorly advertised in a small cinema and felt it was wholly spoiled by the poor performance of the film's marketing and distributors. So much so that on leaving the cinema I telephoned my father at once from a call box and told him how highly I rated it. He may have been startled to hear from me as I was the typical uncommunicative student, never writing home.

    The film not only has Williamson but also Rachel Roberts giving a good performance, and the ensemble cast does some fine work - there is a brilliant mocking of life in a Virginia Water type of suburbia where all have quality cars in their drives and trite conversation over canapés. It is critical in its style of the mass demolition of the Liverpool slums and is almost elegiac at what is lost thereby, much in the same way as was The Likely Lads TV series. 'Get Carter' is more vulgar, with Michael Caine producing shotguns and leaving bodies about. Williamson is much more earthy - there is a brutal kicking in the film which really makes you wince.

    It's also, in its way, a tribute to a kind of Brendan Behan Irishness that was being squeezed out of Britain's cities - the hard-working, hard-living heavy-drinking workers who actually built things with their muscles as opposed to the prissy types who never dirtied their hands. This is why the Williamson character is such an outcast in his smooth London corporate job (in the heart of a City of London that would over the next 15 years also be transformed) but nonetheless effective in his own rough and ready blunt way.

    One superb moment is at the end of the film when Williamson driving his Jaguar at breakneck speed has jumped a Stop sign at a roadworks and is racing down a single track sure that oncoming traffic must be starting his way shortly. He just gets away with it, at the expense of a few traffic cones and similar, and one of those in the car says words to the effect "If you can get away with that, you can get away with anything". As he does (I won't spoil the plot by saying more). This is not a sanitized look at Liverpool but a cold stare. Jack Gold made a great film here and it deserved better of its distributors who did not have faith in the product.

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    Centres d’intérêt connexes

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    Drame

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The last cinema film of Malcolm Arnold
    • Gaffes
      Most of the home street scenes were filmed in Seacombe, Wallasey, but the cutting of the film makes it a rather impressive walk out the a door after the bed-side scene: from Seacombe back-street, north along Birkenhead's Corporation Road, then back across the docks into Seacombe via the Four Bridges, ending up on the Liverpool side in the next cut.
    • Citations

      Sir Miles Bishton: [sneering] I never knew you were Irish, Marler.

      [Mick hits him in the face]

      Sir Miles Bishton: .

    • Bandes originales
      Believe Me, If All Those Endearing Young Charms
      [Trad.]

      [Lyrics by Thomas Moore]

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    FAQ13

    • How long is The Reckoning?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 27 mars 1970 (Irlande)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Royaume-Uni
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Die Abrechnung
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Farringdon, Londres, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni
    • Société de production
      • Columbia Pictures Corporation
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 51min(111 min)
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.75 : 1

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