Un ancien tueur à gages de la CIA qui fuit son passé découvre à quel point il est difficile de prendre sa retraite lorsqu'il tombe sur une petite ville contrôlée par des mercenaires et sur u... Tout lireUn ancien tueur à gages de la CIA qui fuit son passé découvre à quel point il est difficile de prendre sa retraite lorsqu'il tombe sur une petite ville contrôlée par des mercenaires et sur une famille qui résiste à leur emprise.Un ancien tueur à gages de la CIA qui fuit son passé découvre à quel point il est difficile de prendre sa retraite lorsqu'il tombe sur une petite ville contrôlée par des mercenaires et sur une famille qui résiste à leur emprise.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Dr. Florian
- (as Don Mackay)
- Eli
- (as Tom Herton)
Avis à la une
Reynolds is a smooth pimp, even kissing a young girl in front of her father. I mean, really, who has the balls to do that? Only Reynolds. And why not, when you can go around and beat people up -- or kill them -- without the police being able to stop you?
An odd mystery: at one point, Malone's birth date is given as February 14, 1941. I wonder if this date was chosen for any particular reason. This is not Reynolds' birthday, and in fact would make Malone a few years younger than Reynolds...
I vividly remember first watching this on video rental and thought it was brilliant and even though it's very dated I still love the film as an 80's classic like I would watch some old black and white film.
I don't feel I should have to wait until the film is 40 or 50 years old to claim it is an classic nor should I go with other persons comments that it is crap just because they are watching the film without growing up in the 80's when the film was made and is set in.
with regards jpclarke
The story (scripted by Christopher Frank, based on a novel by William P. Wingate) is awfully familiar stuff: Malone (Reynolds) is a former CIA assassin with no more desire to do his job, so he takes it on the lam. Car trouble forces him to stop at a remote service station run by nice guy Paul Barlow (Scott Wilson), who just so happens to have a cute daughter, Jo (Cynthia Gibb). Malone has arrived in this community just in time to get caught up in the schemes of Delaney (Cliff Robertson), a rich man buying up property like crazy; Delaney turns out to be a right wing zealot hoping to establish a base of operations in the area.
Despite receiving a very serious bullet wound at one point, Malone is a tough s.o.b. who takes on all comers. Fortunately for him, most of Delaney's henchmen are completely useless idiots. That definitely removes a lot of suspense. Reynolds delivers a commendably low key performance in the lead, the ever likable Wilson is excellent as always, Robertson is amusing in a very unsubtle turn, and Gibb (whose character Jo becomes quite attached to Malone) is endearing. Lauren Hutton co-stars as the CIA agent sent to take care of the Malone problem, Kenneth McMillan is the local sheriff, and Tracey Walter and Dennis Burkley play a troublesome pair of redneck brothers working for Delaney.
If nothing else, this obvious "Shane" homage should be a mild diversion for Reynolds fans.
Six out of 10.
Still what stood out to me just how closely it followed Clint Eastwood's formula in the 1985 western "Pale Rider", especially the connection the between the young impressionable girl (the delightful Cynthia Gibb) and the ex-CIA hit-man drifter who unwillingly gets caught up a small town drama. That was a western, but here it takes a modern-day approach but the western vibe of a mysterious stranger coming into town lingers heavily. Someone escaping their past, trying to get by to only find themselves bringing unwanted attention. The script is rather slapdash and some story arches are questionable (main character's ability to heal), contrived and incredibly silly. Like that of Hutton's assassin, in what feels like nothing more than to push the plot along and add motivation.
Malone was a CIA hit-man who suddenly calls it quits despite the disapproval of his bosses. This leads him to hitting the road to escape his past, but he finds himself stranded in a small town when his car breaks down. For the time being he stays with the mechanic and his daughter until its repaired, but its not a peaceful stay as he comes to blows with a pitiless land developer with very ambitious political interest in seeing America weed out its traitors.
For most part "Malone" is predictable, stoic and casually paced with quick bursts of brutal, heated violence. However this all changes when it becomes personal for Reynold's hit-man, as the crackerjack climatic showdown feels like something out of a comic book James Bond outing. Nonetheless some scenes do pack a punch and the striking sequence of Reynold's coming out of the shadows to confront Cliff Robertson's callously patriotic bad-guy is a marvellous touch. You gotta love his paranoid ramblings and the extreme lengths he goes to. Robertson nails down the puppeteer character with great intent, despite a certain hammy glee to his grandeur viper illustration. There's some good support from the likes of Scott Wilson, Lauren Hutton, Kenneth McMillan, Alex Diakun, Phillip Anglim, Dennis Burkley and character actor Tracy Walter who has a very memorable encounter with the title character.
Director Harley Cokeliss' plain direction is sturdy without showing much style, despite his use of slow-motion and capturing shots of an attractive valley backdrop.
Going back to serious roots, Reynold's "Malone" is sober, tough and mindless action.
"Are you so important?"
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesIn the closing credits, Malone is holding his Virginia driver's license as it slowly burns . The signature on the card of the Commissioner of Motor Vehicles reads "Alfred E. Newman", who is "Mad Magazine"'s goofy mascot.
- GaffesThe sheriff looks at Malone's drivers license which clearly has a street address in Baltimore, then immediately asks "Why do you have a post office box for an address?"
- Citations
Paul Barlow: When were you in Viet Nam?
Richard Malone: 1961.
Paul Barlow: [gives it some thought] That was a little early, wasn't it?
Richard Malone: Not for what I was supposed to do.
- Versions alternativesUK cinema and video versions were cut by 1 second to remove an ear clap.
- ConnexionsReferenced in The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson: Burt Reynolds/Dick Shawn (1986)
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Malone?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 10 000 000 $US (estimé)
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 3 060 858 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 1 377 691 $US
- 3 mai 1987
- Montant brut mondial
- 3 060 858 $US
- Durée
- 1h 32min(92 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1