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La loi du milieu

Titre original : Get Carter
  • 1971
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 52min
NOTE IMDb
7,3/10
39 k
MA NOTE
Britt Ekland and Geraldine Moffat in La loi du milieu (1971)
Home Video Trailer from Warner Home Video
Lire trailer2:40
1 Video
99+ photos
GangsterCrimeThriller

Lorsque son frère meurt dans des circonstances mystérieuses dans un accident de voiture, le gangster londonien Jack Carter se rend à Newcastle pour enquêter.Lorsque son frère meurt dans des circonstances mystérieuses dans un accident de voiture, le gangster londonien Jack Carter se rend à Newcastle pour enquêter.Lorsque son frère meurt dans des circonstances mystérieuses dans un accident de voiture, le gangster londonien Jack Carter se rend à Newcastle pour enquêter.

  • Réalisation
    • Mike Hodges
  • Scénario
    • Mike Hodges
    • Ted Lewis
  • Casting principal
    • Michael Caine
    • Ian Hendry
    • Britt Ekland
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,3/10
    39 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Mike Hodges
    • Scénario
      • Mike Hodges
      • Ted Lewis
    • Casting principal
      • Michael Caine
      • Ian Hendry
      • Britt Ekland
    • 264avis d'utilisateurs
    • 85avis des critiques
    • 80Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Nomination aux 1 BAFTA Award
      • 1 nomination au total

    Vidéos1

    Get Carter
    Trailer 2:40
    Get Carter

    Photos125

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    + 117
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    Rôles principaux43

    Modifier
    Michael Caine
    Michael Caine
    • Jack Carter
    Ian Hendry
    Ian Hendry
    • Eric Paice
    Britt Ekland
    Britt Ekland
    • Anna
    John Osborne
    • Cyril Kinnear
    Tony Beckley
    Tony Beckley
    • Peter
    George Sewell
    George Sewell
    • Con McCarty
    Geraldine Moffat
    Geraldine Moffat
    • Glenda
    • (as Geraldine Moffatt)
    Dorothy White
    • Margaret
    Rosemarie Dunham
    • Edna
    Petra Markham
    • Doreen
    Alun Armstrong
    Alun Armstrong
    • Keith
    Bryan Mosley
    Bryan Mosley
    • Cliff Brumby
    Glynn Edwards
    Glynn Edwards
    • Albert
    Bernard Hepton
    Bernard Hepton
    • Thorpe
    Terence Rigby
    Terence Rigby
    • Gerald Fletcher
    John Bindon
    John Bindon
    • Sid Fletcher
    Godfrey Quigley
    Godfrey Quigley
    • Eddie
    Kevin Brennan
    Kevin Brennan
    • Harry
    • Réalisation
      • Mike Hodges
    • Scénario
      • Mike Hodges
      • Ted Lewis
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs264

    7,338.6K
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    Avis à la une

    9malcolmi

    Mike Hodges and Michael Caine have made a timeless film.

    Jack Carter, the reserved London gangster, travels north to Newcastle, his home town, to find the cause of his brother's death. He's warned by his bosses not to go, but refuses to obey them. We, and he, discover the reasons for the warning, which are intertwined with the details of his brother's fate, and watch Carter's quest for revenge reach its logical conclusion. The underworld life sets a kitschy vision of glamour - music-box decanter sets, flashy bespoke suits, and garishly decorated villas - against the grotty reality of arcade slot machines, pornographic 8mm films, and the claustrophobic grubbiness of Newcastle's industrial tenements. Carter, who prides himself on a style of detached shrewdness, navigates both worlds, until he discovers that they're intertwined, sickeningly. The corruption which provides him his living has tainted his own family. I think the centre of the film is the brilliant moment when Carter sits in bed in the flickering light of a projector, discovering the truth about his world. He weeps, silently, knowing what he must now do. But vengeance is all he knows, and it consumes him.

    This story captures with great subtlety the coarse truths about poverty, and crime, which are as true today in Canada and the US as they were forty years ago in England. There's no heroism, no loyalty, no glamour. We feel a kind of sorrowful revulsion at the squalid reality of Carter's world, even as we fear the intensity of his quest for his brother's killers. And we realise we've seen a perfect film of its kind - exceptionally skillful acting, cinematography and editing, bringing to life a taut script. Never again will we fall for the false romanticism of crime.
    8boblipton

    The Revenge Drama

    London criminal Michael Caine returns to Newcastle for his straight-arrow brother's funeral. The police say he got drunk and killed himself in a driving accident, but little bits don't add up. Caine pokes around Newcastle's dirtier side and becomes convinced it was a murder. But who and why?

    It's a thoroughly unlikable movie, from Caine's seething performance through Wolfgang Suchitsky's overcast Technicolor lighting through the apathetic and evil people who inhabit the movie's world. At the same time, this neo-noir take on the Elizabethan Revenge drama is a brilliant exposition on the dark side. There's no one to admire here, no dark humor. The people in charge are not misfits. John Osborne, as a local crook, isn't a man oppressed by his environment, searching for a meaning that isn't there. He's a smart man who has judged his society accurately and coldly applied its rules to his own profit.

    Caine's self-loathing rage is likewise efficiently applied. The police won't come and save anyone, they won't avenge anyone, they won't restore order by finding the bad guys. They are almost unseen, a howling car showing up too late, unable to stop or even notice Caine's spree. There is no justice, just revenge, and application of the rule that mad dogs must be put down.
    7blanche-2

    Michael Caine as one tough dude

    Michael Caine stars in "Get Carter," a 1971 film co-produced by Caine, who was sick of the parts he was getting. Well, the role of Carter is certainly a terrific part. Ian Hendry and John Osborne also star.

    Carter, a London gangster, returns to his home town of Newcastle for his brother's funeral. When he is offered a ticket out of town, his suspicion about his brother's death grows stronger. His investigation leads him to a pornography ring and lots of bad guys.

    There's lots of violence in this film as Carter dispenses with anyone who's in his way without even blinking. He's mean as they come. Caine is fantastic, and he's surrounded by effective evil-doers.

    There's nudity, too, as well as phone sex. If you like this type of gangster movie, you'll love this. Well-directed by Mike Hodges.
    9Quinoa1984

    a nasty bastard of a movie with a steel-eyed, cold but brilliant performance in the lead

    Jack Carter is not someone you'd usually want to take home to your mother. He's a career criminal, a gangster in London whose brother was in Newcastle (his hometown) when he found out that he died under mysterious circumstances. Already we're on his side, since it was obviously not a typical drunk-driving accident that caused Frank Carter's death, and we want to see revenge and/or justice. But Jack Carter, that man with a near-permanent dour look on his face and a tendency to get violent, isn't a typical protagonist. He's something of an anti-hero, a nasty one at that, who is a perpetual womanizer (in one oddly hot scene he talks with a direct tone on the phone with a gangster's moll to take off her clothes and masturbate), and will hurt anyone he needs to, sometimes to extreme lengths, to get what he needs to know.

    Certainly he's surrounded in a murky enough criminal environment. The Newcastle of 'Get Carter' is a place with sleazy gangsters betting big bucks and nightclubs with of-the-period music, and women running hotels with weathered looks on their faces. It's here that Carter goes on his investigation, like a hard-boiled detective without mercy. And as he digs deeper into what is at the heart of the mystery- that Frank Carter wasn't a saint, but got duped by the criminal elements and in a pornographic film that brings Jack to tears of rage- it becomes clear he'll have to knock a few heads, and shoot when he must... which is a lot.

    Carter might be more unlikable if not for the star in the role. Michael Caine has a look to him in this film that recalls Alain Delon in the Jean-Pierre Melville pictures, specifically Le Samourai. Nothing can really flinch this guy, unless it's something that he actually cares about. But Caine gives humanity to a character that is on the move, almost always, and has to be on his toes when around unsavory characters. I loved seeing how Caine can just be great at looking around a room or a situation or looking over a person, and how when he gets angry, boy you better get out (even if, or sometimes especially because, you're a woman not dishing on what needs to be told). Caine helps a film that needs that star quality- other actors like John Osbourne as the Big Gangster Kinnear and Ian Hendry as Eric do well enough if only good performances- and where the film digs into some subversive, dark terrain, we have to keep watching it to see how Caine can pull it off.

    Another perk for Hodges is how he deals with the action. Often his film will feel a little slow-going (never too boring, but of a time period, the 70's, when a story could take a little more time in establishing mood), but when action and violence come up it's genuinely shocking and thrilling. We expect to get some satisfaction seeing Carter getting his payback at the criminals, but here there's a dastardly twist as to how just rotten Carter can be with these figures. He goes to their level, and Hodges lets us go along for the wicked neo-noir ride. Some may find it too dark, or just a little too unrelentingly bleak with what Carter finds and how he gets his revenge. But there's the bittersweet part to it as well, especially in the last act, that makes it worthwhile.
    ginger_sonny

    classic

    British gangster classic starring Michael Caine as the eminently quotable, ultimately tough Jack Carter

    Hard to believe that a major studio felt the need to remake this British gangster classic, which ranks up there with the likes of The Long Good Friday as one of the finest home grown films of the past 30 years.

    Caine is the gangster who goes to Newcastle for his brother's funeral and begins to suspect his death was no accident; cue edgy thrills and violence as he exacts revenge on the folks he believes responsible.

    Caine, as in the majority of his signature roles, is superbly armed with a set of eminently quotable one-liners ("You're a big man, but you're out of shape" tops the bill this time), and as emotionally detached and violently ruthless as Point Blank's similarly vengeful Lee Marvin, while director Hodges paints a gritty, bleak picture of the gangster underworld.

    Soap fans will be equally intrigued to see Coronation Street's Alf Roberts (aka Bryan Moseley) being tossed off a roof.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Writer and director Mike Hodges was surprised that a star of Michael Caine's stature would want to play Carter. Caine said "One of the reasons I wanted to make that picture was my background. In English movies, gangsters were either stupid or funny. I wanted to show that they're neither. Gangsters are not stupid, and they're certainly not very funny." He identified with Carter as a memory of his working class upbringing, having friends and family members who were involved in crime and felt Carter represented a path his life might have taken under different circumstances: "Carter is the dead-end product of my own environment, my childhood. I know him well. He is the ghost of Michael Caine."
    • Gaffes
      Kinnear's LandRover [BYX 564B], driven by Eric Paice throughout most of the movie, is the same vehicle used by the Police when they raid Kinnear's mansion near the end.
    • Citations

      Cliff Brumby: [blocking Carter's path] Listen, I don't like it when some tough nut comes pushin' his way in and out of my house in the middle of the night! Bloody well tell me who sent you!

      Jack Carter: You're a big man, but you're in bad shape. With me it's a full time job. Now behave yourself.

      [Brumby takes a swing at Carter, who grabs his hand, punches him, and then slaps him in the face for good measure]

      Jack Carter: [as he's leaving] Goodnight, Mrs. Brumby.

    • Versions alternatives
      Due to deep accents of some characters, the film was partially dubbed for the US release to allow Americans to understand what the characters on screen were saying.
    • Connexions
      Featured in V.I.P.-Schaukel: Épisode #7.1 (1977)
    • Bandes originales
      Lookin' For Someone
      (uncredited)

      Music by Roy Budd

      Lyrics by Jack Fishman

      Sung by Lesley Cline, Mick Gallagher and John Turnbull

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    FAQ16

    • How long is Get Carter?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 3 novembre 1971 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Royaume-Uni
    • Site officiel
      • Official Site
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Carter - Asesino implacable
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Blackhall Rocks Beach, Blackhall Rocks, Hartlepool, County Durham, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(Final Confrontation between Carter & Paice on the beach and by the aerial ropeway coal skips.)
    • Société de production
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer British Studios
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 750 000 £GB (estimé)
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 60 404 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 52 minutes
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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