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Carnage

Original title: Prime Cut
  • 1972
  • 12
  • 1h 28m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
6.6K
YOUR RATING
Gene Hackman and Lee Marvin in Carnage (1972)
Watch Official Trailer
Play trailer2:34
1 Video
93 Photos
GangsterActionCrimeDramaThriller

A vicious Kansas City slaughterhouse owner and his hick family are having a bloody "beef" with the Chicago crime syndicate over profits from their joint illegal operations. Top enforcer Nick... Read allA vicious Kansas City slaughterhouse owner and his hick family are having a bloody "beef" with the Chicago crime syndicate over profits from their joint illegal operations. Top enforcer Nick Devlin is sent to straighten things out.A vicious Kansas City slaughterhouse owner and his hick family are having a bloody "beef" with the Chicago crime syndicate over profits from their joint illegal operations. Top enforcer Nick Devlin is sent to straighten things out.

  • Director
    • Michael Ritchie
  • Writer
    • Robert Dillon
  • Stars
    • Lee Marvin
    • Gene Hackman
    • Sissy Spacek
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    6.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Michael Ritchie
    • Writer
      • Robert Dillon
    • Stars
      • Lee Marvin
      • Gene Hackman
      • Sissy Spacek
    • 87User reviews
    • 73Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:34
    Official Trailer

    Photos92

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    Top cast23

    Edit
    Lee Marvin
    Lee Marvin
    • Nick Devlin
    Gene Hackman
    Gene Hackman
    • Mary Ann
    Sissy Spacek
    Sissy Spacek
    • Poppy
    Angel Tompkins
    Angel Tompkins
    • Clarabelle
    Gregory Walcott
    Gregory Walcott
    • Weenie
    Janit Baldwin
    Janit Baldwin
    • Violet
    Bill Morey
    Bill Morey
    • Shay
    • (as William Morey)
    Clint Ellison
    • Delaney
    Howard Platt
    Howard Platt
    • Shaughnessy
    Les Lannom
    Les Lannom
    • O'Brien
    Eddie Egan
    Eddie Egan
    • Jake
    Therese Reinsch
    Therese Reinsch
    • Jake's Girl
    Bob Wilson
    • Reaper Driver
    Gordon Signer
    Gordon Signer
    • Brockman
    Gladys Watson
    • Milk Lady
    Hugh Gillin
    Hugh Gillin
    • Desk Clerk
    • (as Hugh Gillin Jr.)
    E. Lund
    • Mrs. O'Brien
    David Savage
    • Ox-Eye
    • Director
      • Michael Ritchie
    • Writer
      • Robert Dillon
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews87

    6.76.5K
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    Featured reviews

    7mdewey

    It ain't no "Point Blank"

    Mr. Marvin is his usual cut-to-the-chase, laconic bad guy in a so-so film with a minimal plot line and lots of action sequences. The fact that most of this melodrama is set somewhere in a Kansas farm region automatically makes this movie a bit different from others of this genre, rather than being filmed in the usual urban settings. Although this is a nice touch and the villains are also a bit different from what we are normally accustomed to, the movie tends to drag a little due in large part to the over emphasis on the visceral and under emphasis on plot and character development. Of course, this movie may have been intended to be shown in this manner, but I (a no-name part-time movie critic!) prefer more plot involvement, a la "Point Blank".

    Great acting by the principals (Lee, Gene H., Sissy) helps redeem the film, especially a very young Sissy S. as one of Gene H.'s abducted sex slaves. But it's bad guy Lee doing a heroic turnabout by going on a rescue mission to save the "girls" from the really bad guy, Gene H., who already is in "Dutch" with Lee because of past transgressions.

    At any rate, check it out and see for yourself: it's still fun!
    Michael_Elliott

    Nice Little Gem with Terrific Cast

    Prime Cut (1972)

    *** (out of 4)

    Fun crime picture has a Chicago enforcer (Lee Marvin) heading to Kansas City where an evil cattle baron (Gene Hackman) owes the big boys some money but he doesn't plan on cutting them in on his business. PRIME CUT is a film that not too many people know, which is pretty surprising when you consider how popular these type of crime films are. Not to mention the film is probably the only one in history to feature three Oscar winners as well as a man who appeared in PLAN 9 FROM OUTER SPACE. Overall director Michael Ritchie does a very good job at keeping the picture running very smoothly and while the picture certainly has some flaws, it's still a highly entertaining and at times sleazy picture. One of the highlights come early on when Marvin and his men show up at a "cattle" auction only to discover that Hackman has a major business of selling off women. The women, all in cages like cattle, serve up quite the image. The film also manages to have some great violence, although none of it really goes over-the-top or gets too graphic. There's a terrific sequence during a fair as well as another in a sunflower field. I'm not going to ruin either sequences but they contain some nice suspense. Of course, one of the greatest aspects is the terrific cast. While each cast member has been better in other movies, there's no doubt that it's still very fun to see them all together. Marvin and Hackman really appear to be having fun in their roles and we also get Angel Tompkins in a brief role as the woman who was with both of them. Sissy Spacek appears in a pretty thankless role but it's still fun seeing her. Gregory Walcott, a veteran of Edward D. Wood, Jr., appears as one of the major bad guys. As I said, there are certainly some flaws including the entire relationship between Marvin and Spacek but fans of 70's crime pictures will still want to check this out.
    alicecbr

    Lee Marvin at his Best

    So what if 'Dog Day', made a decade later, repeats the threshing machine chase. It only underscores the success of the original, in which the 'teeth' of the threshing machine seem almost human. Watching them grind up the limo makes you feel almost sorry for the car. There are other scenes and themes I doubt that you will ever see in another movie: the packing house expose of what that meat you eat really goes through as it goes from the moo-cow to the sausage, for one. At least we don't see the guy actually made into the sausage the brother keeps eating!!

    Hackman plays his evil best as an all-American who 'gives the public what they want' from meat to dope to virgins raised in an orphanage quite unlike the one in 'Cider House Rules'. Sissy Spacek does a good job in her first onscreen role, but come on!!! No one could be so stupid as to be unaware that they are wearing a completely transparent gown!! A few other holes in the film exist, but it is certainly a unique experience.
    8winner55

    Prime Marvin

    In 1972, critics were so offended by the violence of this film (they were easily offended, back then), that they almost wholly missed the film's humanistic message - which is strange, because I doubt a film could state a theme more explicitly without getting didactic. If this films evades such lecturing - and it does - it is largely due to the exceptional understated performance of Lee Marvin; I didn't think anyone could wear white loafers and still look cool, but Marvin pulls it off. His utterly deadpan approach underscores his character's rapid responses to crisis situations - a truly dangerous man because no one expects him to be dangerous, he just looks cool. Michael Ritchie's direction is also noteworthy; he uses some strategies that also appear understated, thus giving the film a grittier feeling than one might expect from its MidWest locale. And there are some risky editing gambits (like the combine-car collision sequence) that, even when not totally successful, are efforts to be respected exactly for the risk undertaken. There are some drawbacks to the film - the ending (which I won't reveal) is entirely of its era, and a little embarrassing now; Gene Hackman's performance is a throwaway, when it needs to be as confrontational as Marvin's is cool; but the weakest point of the film is its sense of history: This script wanted to be a period piece set in the 1930s; the criminal underworld which these characters inhabit was a victim of the St. Valentine's Day Massacre (which put an end to the Irish mob in Chicago). To get a feel of the film that screenwriter Dillon really wanted to make, see "Road to Perdition". BUt taken on its own terms, and allowing that it is a genre film (and never pretends otherwise, really), this is a highly entertaining gangster film, with a grand performance by Lee Marvin.
    7Hey_Sweden

    Effectively offbeat.

    An interesting item on the resume of Michael Ritchie, the late director whose other credits include "Downhill Racer", "The Candidate", and "Fletch", the fast-paced and tongue-in-cheek crime drama "Prime Cut" succeeds at being an amusing piece of work. It's just sleazy and off kilter enough to make it a good if not memorable entertainment. It's well worth viewing for fans of the cast, establishing its tone early on when the mob in Chicago learn of the fate of one of their hired guns. Ritchie mines the rural settings for lots of atmosphere and uses the 2.35:1 aspect ratio to his advantage. There are also some real highlights in terms of action: a chase and a climactic shootout, both of which happen in fields. Enhancing all of it is a wonderful score by Lalo Schifrin.

    Star Lee Marvin doesn't exactly have to stretch himself here, exuding that trademark cool as Nick Devlin, a mob enforcer assigned the task of collecting a debt from a Kansas rancher, played by Gene Hackman. (Another indication of this movie's tone is the fact that Hackman's character has a female name, Mary Ann!) Mary Ann doesn't want to pay his debt because he has no respect for the Chicago mafia. So Nick and a few others travel to Kansas City to pay Mary Ann a visit. Naturally, Mary Ann makes full use of his slaughterhouse, turning all of his enemies into cuts of meat! Nick also learns that his quarry is depraved enough to sell young girls as sex slaves, and rescues one of these girls, Poppy, played by the endearing Sissy Spacek.

    Hackman's performance is great fun, and also appearing on screen are the delectable Angel Tompkins as Nick's former flame Clarabelle, Gregory Walcott as Mary Ann's thuggish brother "Weenie", Janit Baldwin as Poppy's friend Violet, and legendary police officer Eddie Egan as mob boss Jake. They all make this movie a pleasing diversion, one that, as previously mentioned, injects some trashy elements but never dwells too much on the darkness in the story. The big confrontation at the end is very moody and well done overall, and there's a satisfying wrap-up at the end.

    Seven out of 10.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Gene Hackman accepted the secondary role of "Mary Ann" because it was his first offer of work after being unemployed for nearly six months since the end of filming on The French Connection (1971).
    • Goofs
      When Nick enters the cornfield there's a spot on the back of his jacket. Next scene the strap on the pouch is covering it.
    • Quotes

      Poppy: I never knew a man before; not even to talk to.

      Nick Devlin: Well where did they keep you?

      Poppy: In the orphanage with the other girls.

      Nick Devlin: And where was that?

      Poppy: It was in Missouri. It's the only home I really remember. It was in the country.

      Nick Devlin: Then you have nobody?

      Poppy: Just Violet.

      Nick Devlin: Who?

      Poppy: Violet, the other girl that was with me. She's my sister... well, not truly but we're closer than that. Violet and me we'd climb into each other's bed when it was really cold in the winter time and hug each other really close. Sometimes we'd touch each other and dream how a man's hands would feel on us. I'd talk to her in a really deep voice and I'd say, "I love you Violet." Then I'd kiss her so she wouldn't cry. We tried to run away once. But the old woman caught us. She said we couldn't leave that we were being raised up special. But that when we were done there would be lots of handsome men loving us forever.

    • Crazy credits
      In all of the marketing media, Lee Marvin and Gene Hackman were both billed above the title. However, in the opening credits, only Marvin is.
    • Connections
      Featured in Discovering Film: Sissy Spacek (2019)

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    FAQ15

    • How long is Prime Cut?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 8, 1972 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Carnicería humana
    • Filming locations
      • Calgary, Alberta, Canada
    • Production company
      • Cinema Center Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $520,493
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 28m(88 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39 : 1

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